Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / June 19, 1926, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAGE EIGHT Sale of Ceder Chests Genuine Tennessee Red Cedar Guaranted Moth Proof $15.75 Cedar Chest for $12.50 $18.75 Cedar Chest for $15.00 22.50 Cedar Chest for SIB.OO $24.75 Cedar Chest for $19.80 $31.50 Cedar Chest for $25.20 All high-grade Red Cedar beautifully carved and highly jtolished. Best quality copper locks and hinges. See ihein in our window, and get one at sale price. Some 20 per cent. Concord Furniture Co. THE RELIABLE FURNITURE STORE lOOOOCXXXIOOOOOOOOOOOCXIOCaOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCNM ICE ICE i Let’s Go—START TODAY a regular order. j The Price is Right—the Service is Right. Buy coupon books and save 10 Per Cent. Ice delivered on coupon cost 54 cents per 100. On coupon in 50 lb. lots at ICE PLANT, 44 cents per |f 100 pounds. j 300 lb. lots, delivered 40 cents per 100 pounds. 300 lb. lots at Ice Plant 33 1-3 cents per 100 pounds. || X Please pay driver and see that you receive quantity \ O you pay for. 8 A. B. POUNDS | PHONE 244 PHONE 244 ! [ PoomiooooooooooooootjooooooweQoooooooooociooopocoor Peas! PEAS! Peas! We have a good supply of Field Peas which we offer | -•you at $3.50 per bushel. They will not last long at this 1 , grice. ’ jj Let us have your order at once. Bring us your Poul- ij try, Eggs and Garden Vegetables. We pay cash for Poultry and Eggs and never get too ! . many. I C.H. BARRIER & CO. Protect Your Property and Your Money OT7OUR bouse, whca painted with * Marietta House Paints, is practi cally guaranteed against die ravages of foul weather by die Marietta Service Certificate. No other paint manufac turer offers you such a certificate. Ask us about it today. Concord Paint& Paper Ccopany 842 N. Church Street Phone 16L MARIETTA PAINT STATION | An obscure poet took hie wife end hie eight children to ttie zoo. The children had made repeated de mand* to see the »'k, so the poet .pleaded ifith the man at the gate. “I’m- a poet,” he said, “and I have a wife and eight children. Can we get S The man at the gate took] a good jook at the poet. “Jqet a moment.” -fietaald. “You are a poet. That ia ”your wife, and those are your eight Lpkildren, and yon want to have a look at the elk?” “Exactly,” said the poet. “If you will kindly wait a second,” said the man, "I’ll bring the elk here to have a look at you!” Daphne—l’m superstitious about Friday. Doris—Would you decline a pro posal on Friday? Daphne—Well—er—if it were sat isfactory in other, respecta I might think it unlucky to decline. Concord Daily Tribune TIME OF CLOSING MAILS Tbe time of the closing of maQs at the Concord postofflee is as follows: Northbound 130-41:00 P. M. 36*-10:00 A. M. 34 4:10 P. M. 38— 8:30 P. M. 30—11:00 P. M. Southbound 39 9:30 A. M. 45 3 :30 P. M. 135 8:00 P. M. 29—11:00 P. £4. RAILROAD SCHEDULE In Effect Jan. 30, 1920. Northbound .Vo. 40 To New York 9 :28 P. M. Vo. 136 To Washington 5:05 A. M No. 36 To New Ycfk 10:25 A. M. ! No. 34 To New York 4:43 P. M. No. 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M. No. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P. M. No. 32 To New York 9:03 P. M. No. SO To New York 1:55 A. M. Southbound No. 45 To Charlotte 3 :45 P. M No. 85 To New Orleans 9:56 P. M No. 29 To Birmingham 2 :35 A. \1 No. 81 To Augusta 5:51 A. M No. 33 To New Orleans 8:15 A. M. No. 11 To Charlotte 8 :00 A. M. 1 -No. 135 To Atlanta 8:37 P. M No. 39 To Atlanta 9:50 A. M. No. 8? To New Orleans 10:45 A. M. I Tram No. 34 will stop in Concord to take on passengers going to Wash- j ington and beyond. i Train No. 37 will stop here to dis- : charge passengers coming from be yond Washington. All trains stop in Concord except No. 38 northbound. f jL'bible THOUGHT! I X“FOR TODAY—I 111 Bible Thooffbta memorised, wiD prove • |i| iBL priceless heritage in after year* The Road to Want: —Ho that op pressoth the jx>or to increase his riches, and he that givefh to the rich, shall surely corue to want. —Proverbs 22:10. ["local mention | Miss Mamie Flowe is confined to her home by illness. The Carolina Melody Makers will | play for dinner at the Hotel Concord j Sunday evening. The Ladies’ Aid Society of the First Baptist Church will meet Mon-j day afternoon at 3:30 with Mrs. L. \ R. Crooks. Contributions of the Sunday school | at the First Presbyterian Church to-j morrow will go to the Barium Springs | Orphanage. See the menu for dinner in the! main dining room of the Hotel Con- ' cord Sunday evening. Served from! 6 to 9 p. m„ $1.50. The American Legion Auxiliary j will hold its monthly meeting Mon day evening at 8 o’clock with Mrs.; Ed. Sherrill on North Church street, j Marriage license was issued here j Friday by Register of Deeds Eliott to Stanley Reets, of Clinton. Tenn., and Miss Onnie Wise, of Kannap olis. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Porter, of Black Mountain, arrived in Concord today. They are en route to New York City to attend a drug meeting. ; and plan to leave Concord tomorrow afternoon. Rov Stinton, professional at the Cabarrus Country Club, will go to Charlotte next week to take part in the open golf championship of North Carolina. The qualifying round Will be played the first of the week. The largest crowd of the year en joyed the movies on the “Y” lawn last night. A special program has been arranged for next Friday night which will be the last time the program will be in charge of Sir. Blanks this sum mer. The winning streak of the Asheville team in the South Atlantic was halt ed by Macon Friday, the latter team winning 7to f>. Asheville had won 15 straight games and is now tied with Greenville for first place in the league standing. Concord's first real rain in several weeks fell during the night. The rain began sometime after midnight and fell slowly and steadily for sev eral hours, bringing some relief from the drought that threatened to ruin the crops of the county. Stanly News-Herald: “Deputy Mar shal Calvin Garmond, of Concord, was in the city Wednesday on busi ness. Deputy Garmond succeeded W. A. Hall, who recently resigned his office. He was sworn into office on June Ist, and this was his first of ficial visit to Albemarle.” One man charged with operating a car while intoxicated was given four months on the chain gang in re corder's court Friday. He appealed as did another man sentenced to pay about $75 coats for assault with a deadly weapon. Another man charged I with speeding paid $lO including the costs. “Jack,” tbe Florida aligator sent by Ray Lentz to hie brother, A. N. Lentz, has been given by the latter to the Jackson Training School. I “Jack' will have a home of hie own at the school, having been placed in a pool built several years ago for , one of hie own race who died some months ago. FILLERS66..6 6. .6 ..6.. o..ntla , Counsel —Now. sir, tell me. are you well acquainted with the defendant ! Aronoff? Witness—l’ve known him for twen ty years. t Counsel—Have you ever known him to be a disturber of tbe pub.ie peace? Witness—Well—er—he plays a cor net in an amateur orchestra. t The American flag ia among tbe oldest of national flags. HIE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE JAPAN CHILDREN START TO MOVE TO TRADE ALBUMS Movement is launched to Exeknnge Pictures of Kids With Other Nation'- 1 BY LUTHER A. HUSTON. International News Service Staff Correspondent. Tokio, June 19.—Development of mntun! understanding between ,ti,r children of the nations of the wor d by means of an interchange of pic tures showing the activities of school children in varmint oountriis k- the object of a movement lnuuchea by j the Imperial School Children’s As sociation of Japan. The movement has the support of a large uumber of prominent men and women of Japan, drawn from all walks of life. Its chief sponsor is . Viscount Shibttsawa. a venerable capitalist and advocate of interim | tiomtl goodwill. The scope of the j undertaking and the character of its ! supporters is be ieved to a- oure its success. By students of .Tapanesp history the movement is regarded as a 1 radical departure from the precepts hitherto underlying national edura j tion. Inculcation of the martial spirit j in the younger generation has been a j fundamental Japanese concept for! ! centuries. The object of the present j movement frankly is to promote J peace and break down the influences j that lead to war. Is Peace Move. I "We have witnessed the shocking j disaster of war and seen' how it dis turbed the peace of the world ami bewildered mankind." says a state ment issued by the association, “but fortunately we now can see the rays of peace beaming over the world. To security its guaranty, however, we must implant and cherish the spirit ual craving after peace in the younger generation. "Based on this idea and object the Imperial School Children's Associa tion is starting the exchange of school children’s pictures of the var ious treaty lowers with the hope of attaining mutual understanding and friendly ties among the children of all nations.” Children of all -schools from the kindergarten to the grammar’schools of Japan will be included in the plan. Pictures of activities of school chil dren in other countries will be col lected and exhibited in the Japanese ! ” MASONIC NOTICE. | Special Communication Stokes i Lodge No. 32 A. F. A A. M. Monday evening, June 21, at 7:45 o’clock, j Work on first degree, j By order of the W. M. ' Visitors are welcome, j J. M. Cl I-CLEASFRE, Sec. VALET AitoStrop Razor sharpens yL itself Paul B. Eaton Patents and Trade Marks | 406 Independence Building CHARLOTTE, N. C. la . , ■ | m~~TI MijjßMHft *: OUR PRIVATE CHAPEL AFFORDS PRIVACY, COMFORT The modern funeral chapel provides all the privacy and comfort of a pri vate residence plus every facility and service that the funeral director has at band. ' Our mortuary is a beautiful and restful place that provides our pa trons with a type and character of service unequalled. AMBULANCE SERVICE BELL & HARRIS FUNERAL HOME Open Day and Night Phone »*> CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected Weekly by Cline A Moose) Figures named represent prices paid for produce on the market: Eggs .30 Cam 81.10 Sweet potatoes SIJO Turkey* .28 Onions $1.78 Peat SZOO Butter JO Country Ham JO Country Shoulder J> O-untry Sides .* Joung Chickens . .85 ens Jll ; Irish Potatosj fj 100 CONCORD COTTON MARKET SATURDAY. JUNE 18. imm Cotton 1-..W* -17 14 ' Cotton seed .48 ,- Z jv.' H V"-; -L ■ schools ns they arrive. Souvenir al > burntf of pictures received . from abroad will be distributed among the Japanese school children and meda'.s » <>f honor will be awarded for out standing photographs. Will Exhibit Pictures. When collections of photographs • have been received from all countries, , an exhibit will be arranged for pub- I lie display in all of the leading cities . of the country. The first exhibit of this soft already has been held, the display consisting largely of photo ghaphs obtained from Finnlnnd. and attracted wide attention iu Tokfo, Osaka and other cities- The extent to which pictures of Japanese school children will be sent to other nations has not been definite ly arranged, but it is understood that ’ the various foreign embassies and legations in Tokio are co-operating ro obtain photographs from their countries to exhibit in Japan and to.j distribute Japanese view’s in their native lands. “Just think. 28 francs and 50 cen times fine for beating m.v wife in public!” “But why t'ie 50 centimes?*’ •'Don’t know—amusement, tax, I : suppose.” VoO SHOULD GWE- Toosvour. trade, OOft-VUmfelNG 'S YWGIA-GrR.fcDE- Because we do high grade plumbing—because we at all times install the best of fixtures —because we never yet have overcharged a patron—because we are promt and efficient and our service courteous you should do business with us when you need plumbing. Don't you think so? CONCORD PLUMBING COMPANY 174 Kerr St. Phone 576 Just Received Fresh Shipment of Finest Imported Nuts Mediterranean Salted Almonds Large Selected Salted Pecans Filberts Persian Pistachios (Love Nuts) PEARL DRUG CO. Phones 22—722 HOW TO MAKE~HENS LAY HOT SUMMER MONTHS Bo sure they have shade, plenty of fresh water. Feed the Best High Grade Feeds. CORNO FEEDS are sold by us under a written guarantee to make hens lay. and biddies grow. CORNO SCRATCH FEED and CORNO BIDDIE FEED are made from Clean, Sound Grain, no trash or 61th. CORNO GROWING MASH and CORNO LAYING MASH—These are made from Dried Buttermilk, Dries Beef Scrap. Oat Meal, Glutin Meal, Corn and Wheat Feed, Fish Scrap, • ►full balanced feed for hot weather. We are headquarters for all kinds of feed. W T e sell cheap, and deliver quiek everywhere. CLINE & MOOSE Phone 339 V. S. Phone 339. We deliver i quieje everywhere. Phone Us Your Orders For— t , Fresh Green Beans i Red or White Potatoes, j Fancy Smooth Tomatoes, | Iceberg Lettuce, Cucumbers and Squash. | PHONE 571 1 Cabarrus Cash Grocery Co. { P. S.—Fresh Vrout Friday and Saturday Efird’s Great June Chain Sale Breaking All Previous Records - Bargains Did It oot *w*>ooooooooooo6onoooooocjooooocooooooooooooo<xx Remember Your | , Father Sunday— and remember ;!' that he never for- s! 11l Father’s Day next Sunday ]' < ( affords a grand opportunity < to present a fine gift of M something to wear to the ! grandest man in history. The custom started with, giving Dad a necktie until X somebody remarked that Dad had been getting it bung S around bis neck long enough. fi So why not—a new Schloss Bros. Cool Suit or a New 2 Schoble Hat—or Shirts or Underwear? O HOOVER’S, Inc. THE YOUNG MAN’S STORE ° ooooonoo oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooc 30000000000000000Q0000O0OOOOOGOO0OO00O00000Q00000 Conkey’s Poultry Feed Conkey’s Buttermilk Starting Feed, Growing Mash, Lay- ! ing Mash and Scratch Feed j For Mors Eggs and Chickens Use Conkey’s Poultry Feeds Ask For a Conkey’s Poultry Book Fresh Shipments of All Kinds of Feed Arriving Weekly | RICHMOND - FLOWE CO. MOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO I agN, jfjjjyv WHITE PUMPS | That Are Chic and Charm wfl'lSk Worn with the new Summer J Gowns this one-strap pump will ** ° nC * y° u as a woman style and a wonderful collection of others may be seen at our yww w mm w store. They are made of soft pli |l/ Ij ’ M / able white kid and the price is so I 1/ H W reasonable 1 ▼ £j I O $5.00 TO SB.OO S REPAIRING STORAGE jP* WILLYS KNIGHT and OVERLAND FINE MOTOR CARS Now a Car For Every Purse CORL MOTOR CO. i WASHING GREASING ! PHONE 630 I;! <- ' ' s surelya Jriend in need and j’ 'R| match and in a few minutes steaming hot Water will run v F»ys for itself quickly/ 011 * E. B. GRADY PLUMBING AND HEATING DEALER Office end Show Room 80 E. Corbin St. Office Phone 334 W - ■ Penny Advertisements Get the Result# Saturday, June 19, 1926.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 19, 1926, edition 1
8
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