Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / June 14, 1921, edition 1 / Page 9
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THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N.v C, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 14, 192L U.S. EXPLANATORY NOTS.- Obamatlons Ukea at 8 a. a.. 75tb Jnerldlin time. Air pressura reduced toa level, isobars (continue-as lines) pass thwart points of eqasl au pressure isotherms (dotted lines) pass throuEh points of equal temperature. V O clear: Q partly dT cloud W ram. vr; k. n,.wuKu(iwuia. anaacq areas show precipitation of 0.01 inch or more in past24 hours. B. Y. P. U. ARE IN CITY FOR MEET Hundreds of Delegates Ar rive to Attend State-Wide Convention. Opening address of the Baptist Young People's Union will be made oy V. Alkn Riddick, of Azalea, president f the state convention, at the First laptist church Tuesday night. Tne invention will begin at S o'clock. The subject of Mr. Riddick's address will je "The Keynote." Delegates began pouring into the city from all parts of the ' state Tuesday morning. The Southern Railway put :n special through coaches from Golds rvro. Raleigh, Greensboro.. Winston-Sa-en.. Asheville via Statesville, Hender- .onviiie ana bpartanourg. Reduced "aren were authorized from all stations n North Carolina to delegates to the mention. Special coaches --will be put on the return trip on all trains where needed. The convention will be in session here two days and three nights, closing Thursday night. The urogram Tuesday evening will npen with inspirational music by Rev. Eugene I. Olive, of Mount Airy. Thi-J w:!i be followed by devotional exer cises by Dr. Luther Little, of Char lotte. Special music will be furnished ly Miss Iva Pearson, of Edenton. M Riddick's address will come next, fol lowed by an address by Dr. Charles D. Maddry, of Raleigh, secretary of the T'aptist State Board of Missions. Thd i-ubject of his address will be "The Stewardship of Life." After the pro gram is finished a reception to the delegates will be given. The convention will again convene at 9 o'clock Wednesday . morning. Mu sic, worship and addresses will feature the program. VA dinner will be serve.l in the basement of the church for the dele?ates Wednesday at 12:30 o'clock The presiding officer Wednesday af ternoon will be J. Elmer Van Hook, of Mount Airy. The presiding officer Wednesday evening will be Miss Mary Sue Beam, of Shelby. W. Allen Rid dick will preside Thursday morning, while L. F Gore, of Wilmington, will h the presiding officer that afternoon. The closing program will be Thursday evening with Mr. Riddick as presiding officer. following the closing session the vis itors will be given a reception by mem bers of local unions. Local convention committees are headed by the following: Sloan D. Bag well, hospitality; Howard Hopkins, in formation; John B. Floyd, enrollment; When there's TN fact, the New Perfection Oil Cook 1 Stove does all kinds of cooking .per fectly and economically. 'Vital a New Perfection Oven it is possible to bake the fluffiest of cakes and light, crisply browned biscuits. Note the long blue chimney on each New Perfection burner. This provides a draught which drives clean heat pr ducedbv the white-tippedflameforcibly against the cooking utensil, f sooting it. Soot is simply good heat gone to waste. And remember that the vvhite-tipped flame gives the most heat. Through the mica door in the chimney you can al ways see the flame and wick and adjust them in a second. Department of Agriculture, Weather Bureau. CHARLES F. MARVIN. Chief. tA!LY WEATHER MAP. w9 7 t 7i tvf r4l Va7 W. ALLEN RIDDICK. J. M. Scarborough, reception; J. K. Bostick, automobile; Mrs. Basil M. Boyd, convention secretary. Officers of the convention are: W. Al len Riddick. Azalea, president; J. El mer Van Hook, Mount Airy; Miss Wilma Barlett, South Mills; Miss Mary Sue Beam, Shelby; L. F. Gore, Wil mington; Miss Hope Barker, Durham, vice-president; Miss Louise Miller, Greensboro, recording secretary; Perry Morgan, Dunnfield, secretary; Miss Gaynelle Yates. Raleigh, junior lead er, and Rev. Walter M. Gilmore, San ford, press reporter. r A telegram received Tuesday by The News from Rev. John Jeter Hurt, dated Maxton, stated that a "special Pullman car of Wilmingtonians . is coming loaded to the ceiling. Also 15 delegates on board from Lumberton. Other -delegations - from-' honix, Clarkton, Bladenboro and Maxton." SEAY IS CONTINUING TO PROMPT COUNSEL Florence, Ala., June 14 F. Whit Seay, on trial here on a charge of slay ing his bride on May 15, continued to aid his attorneys today in the conduct of his case. He frequently prompted counsel in the examinations of wit nesses. John Morgan Smith, of Hot Springs Ark., witnessf for the - defense, testi fied he had known Seay for some time and that he was 'very peculiar." J. C. Jackson, of Russellville, Ark., another witness, testified he believed Seay in sane, judging from close association with him. baking to quick amount of attention that the New Per fection requires. No coal or wood to bring in, no ashes or Utter to sweep up and take out. It stands up well above the floor and you can dust under and around it in an instant. Select the four burner size with cabinet top and New Perfection Oven. It is made also in five, three, two and one-burner sizes for any who prefer them. You will always get perfect results from your oil stove if you use Aladdin Secur ity Oil it's pure kerosene. Sew Perfection Oil Cook Stoves are sold at mod department, furniture and hardware stores. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (NEW JERSEY iRFEOl CaakJStoves r HEAD OF INSURGENTS FIGHTING BOLSHEVIKI Constantinople, June 14. Prince Ibrahim Chamyl, the head of the Daghistan insurgent mountaineers of the Northern Caucasus, has taken arms against the Bolsheviki in the Caucasus and declares that he will not surren der until liberty has been re-establish ed in the Caucasus. He has defeated Soviet detachments in several fights recently. The war feasts of Prince Chamyl have been a serious menace to the use of the Caucasus by the Bolsheviki as a base for Persia and Afghanistan, and he is attempting to organize the entire Moslem and Tartar populations of the Trans-Caucasia asramst the Bolsheviki He occupied a favorable position in the Azerijan mountains above the Cas pian and has blown un the Derbend Baku railroad at several points. He even sent an expedition to criipple the railway ealding from Orenburg to Bukhara and Tashent. Prince Chamyl commands an army of 20,000 Tartar insurgents and has adopted the methods of General Makno, the present leader of south Russia, in retreating when he finds himself in a perilous position. DEATHS FU NERAIS JOHN G. GREEN. Prescott, Ariz., June 14. -John G. Green, said to be the last surviving member of Commodore Perry's expedi tion to Japan in 1853, died at the Pioneer's Home here last night. Green had lived in Arizona since 1872. REV. DR. C. C. BROWN. Richmond, Va., June 14. The Rev. Dr. C. C. Brown, one of the best known Baptist ministers of the South, died at a hospital here today where he under went an operation a few weeks ago. His body- will be taken to Sumter, S. C, for burial. Dr. Brown spent nearly all of his ministerial, career as pastor of a Bap tist church in Sumter. In late years, however, he devoted much' of his time to developing a fund 'for caring for aged and distressed Baptist ministers of South Carolina. He was a writer of note. TO ADDRESS STATE TEACHERS. Winston-Salem, June 14. President R. H. Latham, of North Carolina Teachers Assembly, announced today that Dr. E. A. Alderman, president of the University of Virginia, had ac cepted an invitation to address the as sembly at its annual meeting in Ral eigh on Thanksgiving Day, next No vember. ALADDIN SKBWTYOtt STANDARD dtCOHWUXY v r be done the small .- g WEATHER CONDITIONS. 2 June 14, 1921. The "low" yesterday north of Lake Ontario has increased in intensity and appears this morning as a disturbance of quite some intensity off the middle New England coast, attended by fresh to strong winds and rain in New England. No rain has occurred elsewhere cast or tne Mississippi river, and not a grat deal to the westward. There have been light to moderate showers in Arkansas and western Texas and mod erate to heavy rains m Oklahoma, with amounts ranging from one to three inches locally in the central por tion, of this state. Light scattered showers hae also fallen in western Kansas, Arizona, North Dakota and Washington, and moderate rains in Minnesota. Warm weather prevails in tha cotton belt east of the Mississippi river, with maxima ranging from H6 to 100 in South Carolina and eastern Georgia, and from 90 to 98 in North Carolina (except the mountain districts). West of the Mississippi temperatures are generally seasonable, except that some- what low dry temperatures have pre vailed in northwestern sections of the cotton belt. A high-pressure area is developing over the Lake region, follow-in? close ly the northeastern disturban;? and attended by cooler weather in the Lake district and the upper Ohio val ley. The eastward progress of this "high" will cause winds shifting to north and northeast, ana nence cooler weather may be expected in this vicinity to night and "Wednesday. It will continue fair. THE WEATHER Weather Bureau Office. Charlotte, June -4, 1921. Sunrise 5:08 Sunset 7:38 Moonrise ....... . . 2:18 p. m. Moonset 1:15 a. m. Moon phase Full on the 20th TEMPERATURE, Dry Bulb. 8 a. m. 10 a. m. Noon . . . . 79 90 94 Wet Ea!b-. 8 a. m. Noon . 69 73 Highest yesterday Lowest last night Mean yesterday . . . Normal Mean same date last year Excess for month 93 70 82 75 82 6 370 i Excess for year Highest of record for June, 102 rq 1914 Lowest of record for June, 45 iff 1889. PRECD7ITATION. Total for 24 hours ending 8 a. m. . .0 Total for month to 8 a. m 0.26 Normal for June, 4.46 Deficiency for year . . 4.11 HUMIDITY. 8 a. m. 62 30 Noon. . G. S. L1NDGREN, Meteorologist, Why Pay More? 12!T) Fine Granulated Sugar $1.00 1001b Bag Fine Granulated Sugar $7.25 1001b Our best chicken feed $2.65 Our best chicken feed 45c peck Fancy new Irish potatoes.... 60c peck No. 5 Snowdrift Lard 1 ..... 60c N. 10 Snowdrift Lard $1.20 1 pt. Wesson Oil 28c 1 qt." 55c. 24tbs. Elizabeth Flour '. $1.30 241bs. Selfrising Flour $1.35 1 doz. Carnation Milk $1.65 1 doz. Large Octagon Soap ....89c 1 doz. Rolls 10c Toilet Paper 79c Full line of home grown vegetables. Phone us your wants. We deliver. Corner Eleventh and Graham. Phone 4090. PICNIC TIME Wre have the goods for it. Pimentoes, craft cheese, pickles, olives, pimento cheese, boiled ham. pot ted ham, mayonnaise and salad dress ings of all kinds, relish, cakes and crackers a full assortment, Easy Make-Pudding, Jello, all flavors, Swans Down cake flour, fresh blackberries and all kinds of fruits, full line fresh egetables, your chickens, eggs and but ter. Phone ua.your order. Watts Grocery Co. 813 East Seventh St. Phone 4431. SUDAN GRASS A God-send to this country, Sudan and caneseed the only thing left for forage. Sudan can be sown as late & the first or middle of August. Only $6j00 per 100 pounds. Caneseed $1.50 per bushel by the bag. AMERICAN SEED CO. Sll East Tradff St. Phone 3961. - Finest Western Creamery 60c butter, lb. 43c Re-candled fresh eggs, dozen . . . . 33c 55c choice slice bacon .. 43c 6 lbs. fresh grits 25c 3 lbs. head rico .. .. .. 25c Extra fine coffee, lb. .. .. .. .. 29c Pet milk, large cans .. .. .. .. 12c Small cans .... .... 6c Gorton's fish roe and ready to fry 20c Libby's 45c sliced pineapple, can 30c Armour's very best syrup peaches 30c Big bargains in flour and lards. Economy Grocery 37 W. 4th. Phone 4380 Household Duty Is Punishment Given Erring Husband New York. June 14. Magistrate John Kochendorfer, of this city, has begun to put into effect his doctrine, recently expounded, that the right kind of punishment for erring hus bands will end martial infelicity. Holding that husbands are to. blame for seven-eights of all domestic rows, the magistrate announced that, instead of sending them to pail, he would sentence them to any one of ten tasks they might choose. Then the next convicted husband who was arraingned before him for abusing his wife was ordered to do common housework his prisonors go to the workhouse. The choices Magistrate Kochendor fer allows his prisoners follow: Prepare the fatally breakfast ev ery morning. Take care of the children one hour every day. Buy candy and fruit for the wife and children once a week Stay at home one night a week. Take the family oue every Sunday --to church in the morning and for a walk in the afternoon. Allow the wife to handle the fi nances of the family. Start a savings bank account. Wait on yourself instead of asking the wife to wait on him. Repeat every day to his wife, at least once, his marriage vows. Wash the dishes every night. Magistrate Kochendorfer says that 11 few men recognize the daily mon tony of a woman's life and keeping a household together on small pay. The men have some variety even if only in going from their homes to their offices but the wives are senten ced to monotonous drudgery. "Men who abuse their wives need waking up more than they need jail," the Magistrate expounded. "The av erage man would be cured perman ently if he could be set to the tasks to which his wife is committeed and thus learn how much less attractive is her day than his." JITNEY DRIVER FOUND DEAD ALONG HIGHWAY StatesTflle, June 14. The body of Ev erett Smith, a local jitney driver, was found this morning on the Wilkesboro road, fifteen miles north of Sttaesville. Mr. Smith had been to Wilkesboro with two passengers and was returning to his home here. The sheriff and coroner went to the scene this morning and found that an inquest was unnecessary It is the opinion that Mr. Smith suf fered an attack of heart trouble and his car ieft the road as soon as he lost consciousness and overturned, pinning him underneath. It is thought that the tragedy occur red about eleven o'clock last night. Mr. Smith was 45 years old and leaves a wife and two children. GROCERIES THIS STORE Sells spring chickens, country., eggs, vegetables, fruits, roe herring, Nor way mackerel and Hiddenite Corn meal. We want your trade. BOYD-GARNER CO. 319 N. Tryon Phones 1158-1159 FRESH SHIPMENT MacLaren's imperial cheese all sizes. This cheese, is just the thing to take on picnics. It comes in sanitary glass jars. We also carry Philadelphia cream, Neufchatel, Leiderkrantz, snappy Camembert, Roquefort, Sap soga, Pineapple, Switzer, Kraft, Edams, etc. In fact, we carry a com plete liny of cheese all the time. MILLER-VAN NESS CO. We Close Thursdays at 1 O'clock. SMALL TENDER OKRA Fresh green corn, sugar peas, string beans, beets, bell peppers, cucumbers, turnips, white and yellow squash ejg ' plant, tomatoes, ripe peaches, country apples, grapefruit, oranges," bananas, blackberries. S. R. LENTZ. 315 N. Tryon St. Phones 101 & 102 W. M. Sigrmon. Manager. SUGAR Whojesale. Retail. A big reduction in Walter Baker's cocoa and chocolate. -lb. size cocoa 24c; lb. size 48c -rb. size chocolate 22c; lb. size.... 44c Large size Pet milk, can 12c Dozen cans ...$1.40 Small size Pet milk, can 6c Dozen cans 70t' Best head rice, 3 lbs. for 25c Don't forget to . call us when you want coffee, teas, rice, .grits, etc. Prompt delivery. C. 11. KEVNE IJO. Teas, Coffees, Sugars, Grits, Rice, Ete. tZ S. Tryon St. Phone 1551-1552 ciais Princess, the good self-rising flour, in all size bags. 98 lb. hags .. .. .. $5.25 48 lb. bags - $2.65 j 24 lb. bags .... .... . . . . $1.35 i 98 lbs. plain flower? $5.00 100 lbs. Eadan chicken feed . . $2.73 The best hog-feed .. .. .. .. $1.65 Nice white corn, bushel $1.35 The best corn meal, lb 3c Nice home-raised Irish potatoes, peck . .50c Fice fat hens, lb 30c Fresh country eggs, 3 dozen . . $1.00 Kingan sliced bacon, lb. .. .. .. 4oc Craig Fite THE CUT PRICE CASH GROCER RED FRONT 39 SOUTH COLLEGE 1875 PHONES 1876 We Deliver All Over the City. Three Coops Spring Chickens Swift Premiums hams. Kingan's Reliable and Wilson's Certi fied hams, lb 35c Country cured shoulders, lb. . . . . 25c Country hams, lb. .. .. .. 35c 40c Hiddenite waterground meal. 100 lb. bag Mooresville meal .. .. $2.50 2o lb. bags Moresville meal . . . . 75c 24 rbs. Melrose flour $1.50 24 lbs. Patent flour S1.30 Fresh snap beans, teets, squash, pep per, cabbage, cucumbers, tomatoes. 100 lbs. granulated sugar .. $7.25 GULP BROS. . Phones 18061807. 225 East Trade. Fa, $ it s White Shoes If you want to make your feet glad slip them in a pair of our white shoes $3.00 to $9.00 For these hot days there is nothing more comfortable than a soft white ' pump or oxford. See window. Thompson's Phone 23. J. R. Faulkner Co. CASH GROCERY FRESH VEGETABLES KINDS OF ALL Nice Apples, Oranges and Bananas. Fresh Country Eggs 35c do Kingan Slice Bacon 45c lb In Strips at 35c lb. Nicg rw- V& 17c lb. White Boiling Meat 13c lb. 13 lbs Sugar $1.00 ALL -ertrrnrAT CUT PRICES RED FRONT. ! 45 North College Phone 695 We Deliver All Over the City. 50 buys a brand new Coron portable tvoe- writor. Other makes at attractive prices. See us before you buy. PHONr 4342 MOORE CO. POUND & Planning to Take a Shorthand Course in. June? What system will you choose? Why spend from six to eight months time in slavish study of Pitman or Gregg? Instead, why not learn Spencerian, an easy, fascinating system, which is far more speedy and legible than either mman or uregg: Spencerian writers are always in great demand because they turn out a superior grade of work. Learn Spencerian the Twentieth Century method taught in this section exclusively at Brown's Business College. Endorsed by the leading business men of this section. 12 South Tryon St. Ho You Boy Scouts! Take A Lesson In SANDWICHES The good scout knows how to appease the hunger of the road, and so keeps the knapsack of sandwiches always slung where it may be opened at an instant's notice. Draw up, my hearties, and start the camp-fire burning. Any form of sandwich, that mother packs may be turned to royal picnic fare by the simple rite of toasting over the blaze. Tell Mother about these: Baked Bean Sandwich Mash thoroughly one cupful of plain baked bean. Add four tablespoonf uls of grated . Ameri can cheese and a dash of salt, kloisten with four teaspoonf uls of orange juice. Spread between bettered slices of white or brown Bread. And of course no good scout is satisfied with any Bread but the Best for he wants his food to give him the most in the health and energy that BUTTER-NUT BREAD is -the loaf for good. scouts. Eat it to the last crumb. It builds health and vigor. u . i. Carolina Baking Company W 7 1 IV I' v ReTrierates jjvviihout Ice. See It in Operation at 301 North Tryon St. E. GUGGENHEIM, Distributer otice The following firms will close their markets at 1 o'clock on Thursday afternoons beginning June 16 and continue until Sep tember 1st, inclusive: - 1 Felix Hayman, . Mosteller's Market, Frank Williamson, Henry Hayman Barnes Market, CP. Austin, A. W. Austin Lester A. IP'uckett, Jr. Hall Brothers, R. F. Lawing, Stonewall Market. Telephone 256(5 Salmon Sandwich Chop fine two hard-boiled eggs , and add one-half cupful of minc ed salmon. Season to taste and bind together with mayonnaise dressing. Spread between neatly cut slice of buttered Bread. mean manhood. N v 3 I
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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June 14, 1921, edition 1
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