Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / Feb. 1, 1923, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAGE FOUR she Concord Time: * ■ Enters ns second elnss malt matte «t the nt Con X. C., no 4er tl»e Act of March 8. 1879. Published Motiduys arid Thursdayi J- B. SHKRIULI,. KdUor nnd Pnhlishe W. M. SHKRRIf.L. Associate Fdlto Special Representative FROST, LANDIS & KOHN 225 Fifth-Avenue, Xew York Peoples Gas Building, Cliieagr. 1004 Caadltr Bul)ilit)c, Atlanta RtIMIOAD SCHEDULE In Effect December 3, 1922. Northbound No. 44 To Washington , 5:00 A. y No. 36 To Washington 10:55 A. M No. 46 To Danville 3:45 P. M tfo. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P. M No. 32 To Washington 5:29 I*. N No. 138 To Washington 9:45 P. M No. 30 To Washington 1:40 A. 11 Southbound. No. 35 To Atlanta 10.03 P. 1! P No. 29 To Atlanta 2:37 A. 11 No. 31 To Augusta * 6:07 A. 11 tso. 137 To Atlanta 8:-D a. M No. 11 To Charlotte 9:25 A. II No. 45 To Charlotte 3:20 P. M No. 135 To Atlanta ' 9*6 P. M TIME OF CLOSING OF MAILS. Tlio time of the closing of mails a the Concord postoflice is as follows: Northbound. Train No. 44-;-ll p. m. §W Train No. 3G-L-10:30 a. m. Train No. 12 —0:30 p. m. Train No. 38—7:30 p. m. Train No. 30—11 p. m. Southbound. Train No. 37—0:30 a. m. Train No! 45—3:00 p. m. Train No. 135—0:00 p. m.. Train No. 20—11:00 p. in. Bible Thought For The Day SAFE STEPS:-— The slops of a good man are ordered by the Lord: and he delighieth in his wav. —Psalm 37:23. MOKE ROAD BONDS. j- It seems ecrtftiij now that the (ton era I Assembly is going, to, pass the Dili authorizing the State to issue $51,- 000.000 more of good mute Iwinds. Measures looking to this end have al ready advanced far enough in the House to assure passage, and persons who have kepj: in close touch with the fc&nate are of the opinion that the bill will pass that body also. Hardly any 'real- opposition, has developed against the road money in the House, and the manner in which the bill has been ac cepted is rather surprising, especially to 'those persons who are accustomed to believe that people are against tax es. -From*the manner in which the bijl has .been accepted it is apparent that the people of North Carolina are not through with good roads, and we I make this statement with the bellies that the legislators who voted for the " I rTls,obO f n®O additional are representing the people at home. The additional $15,000,000 will - make it possible for the State Iligh-j way Commission to continue the road program airead.fr mapped out. The Commission's time will not expire un til 1925, but if the same construction record is maintained during the next two* years as was maintained last yesir. it is probable that the $50,000.- 000 voted two years ago would give out before 1925. and the biil carrying $15,000,000 is really in the nature of an emergency fund. If the Commis sion did run out of money before 1925 it would have to cease its work: its organization would become disbanded, and when the work was started,again all of the preliminary subjects would i have Ho lie worked out again. That was the strongest argument used by many supporters of the bill. But this bond issuing business in the State will have to end somewhere, it seems to us. and we agree with The Charlotte News, which says "What we are not able to discern about, it all is the end of this thing of issuing bonds in North Caroliiia, Less there would; be to say in regard to this policy if . the bonds were being sold and the money used for improvements which could be paid -for by the"*generation enjoying, them’, instead .of utilizing : long-time credit for improvements that i will have served their day long before j they shall have, been paid for. We ought to have good roads and the best j schools we can command, and the best of everything else that a people might enjoy, but it is just as well while we'are striving to acquire these things that we undertake to pay for some of them as we go, at least help in that direction.” SOI TH CENTER OF TEXTILE IN- j DISTKY. The Soul hern Railway System, in aj recent directory showing the manu facturing plants on its lines in the South, gives valuable and interesting information as to the growth of the textile industry south »f the Mason and Dixon line. '" In the directory are listed 033 cot ton mills, operating 242.000 l<*oms and 12,370,357 spindles. In the entire South J there are 15.004.381 spindles, or 43.21 j per cent, of the total in the" I'uited States. In addition to the cotton mills ! there are also listed 240 knitting mills, j operating 30.581 machines and • 270.-' 713 spindles: 22 woolen mills, with 1.- j 371 looms and 72.200 spindles: ll«silk milis, with 1.303 looms and 85.120 spindles; 50 mattress, batt and felt mill: 22 bleaching, dyeing and finish-j ingf plants I 30 j ute mills; 6 braider mills; and 1 miscellaneous cotton inun -1 ufsicturing plants. Maps and tables in the directory show the constant growth of the tex tile industry in the South and the great percentage of that growth at points on the Southern. In 1922, mills . in the South consumed 3,977,847 bales j of cotton, which was G 0.74 per cent, of J the total consumption in the United | States. On January 1. 1923,» twenty-seven j new plants and additions which will , operate 3,051 loolns and 170,040 spin | dies were under construction at points ion the Southern. There were many j others, of course, being constructed at : points in the South not touched by the '.Southern. The directory shows fur ther that in the year ended July 31, . 1922, new spindles numbering 244,009 | were installed in the South and only 83,301 in other parts of the country. « m r-i ■>*in>rwni»ww.ji<i—wua* BARGAINS EN GERMANY. A, Chicago army officer stationed git Coblenz, \just before leaving for home, bought as a present for his German father-in-law an apartment house in Mainz, with (18 rooms and,a plot of land, U>r SOS. There was a mortgage on the place of 43,000 marks, nomi nally SIO,OOO. That cost him $2 more. Another officer bought, to take home with him, a new SIOO hunting rifle, a # t a cyst of 30 cents. A iitne, fifty-room castle on the Rhine, near Coblenz, with 15 acres of vineyard, is offered for SI,OOO. In line with these bargains is the statement that the Ham burg-Ameri can and North German Lloyd .Steam ship companies are preparing to pay off all their outstanding pre-war boyds. and that they can do so jtoday for 80.- 7(KJk The investors paid $32,500,900 for them. All of which shows the folly of try ing tu finance a country as Germany is being financed now. People whose wealth was in government bonds, in dustrial bonds, mortgages, banknotes or l ank savings- have seen their re i ’ C , sources practically wiped oiit eiue. In the rapid depreciation ac companyiug the vastJnflation of Ger man currency, there has been such an unsettling of prices and values tunfc the multitudes have been reduced to poverty. Such a method of finance al ways brings such results. R. A. DOUGHTOX. It is tic be regretted that such men as It. A. Dougliton cannot serve in two important offices. The new •Com missioner of Revenue for North Caro lina is a man in whom everyone has flie greatest confidence, and we believe j the public would wish that he could {serve infill as Commissioner and legis lator. "Governor’’ Dougliton lias serv ed the State long and'faitlifuily tis a member of the General Assembly. He has fought for sane progress in the State, and he has wielded an influence of good second, to no other man in the State within recent years. As Commissioner of Revenue we be lieve lie will yontinue a success. He knows taxation: is a man of rigid Christian principles ;*and will treat eflbry party in the same fashion. Those characteristics are necessary in every I man who would hold the high position Ito which lie has l icon raised, and we congratulate Governor Morrison and the State on the appointment. NORTH CAROLINA AND FEDERAL TAXES. Only seven States, in the Union paid more federal taxes in 1922 than North Carolina. These States were New | York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Michigan, ; Massachusetts, Ohio and California. This shite paid last year $122,413,000 as taxes on profits, incomes, capital stock and inheritances. The Gastonia Gazette has prepared j some interesting figures on the federal taxes paid in North Carolina, the fig ures showing: v Since 1010 North Carolina has mov ed ahead of New Jersey and Missouri, and our rank now is eighth instead of tentliv Fifth in crop-producing power, and eighth in federal tax-paying power— that’s the record for North Carolina in 1922. As for the South, our rank is first. The table is as follows for the year ■ended" June 30. 1922: North Carolina $122.413,000: Texas $52,348,000: Virginia. 840.590,000: Ken tucky $33,122,000; ’Louisiana $22,754,- 000: ~ Tennessee $21.795,000: Georgia $20,989.000: < >klahoma $18,402.000: Florida $14,320,000; Alabama $11,404,- 000: South Carolina $11,447,000: Ar kansas $0,979,(>)0: Mississippi $4,040,- 000. Texas and Virginia are our nearest in the South in federal tax totals paid in 1922, but North Car olina paid more than both of them To gether—s23,ooo,ooo more. We paid more than the rest of the South Atlantic States -combined —'Vir- ginia, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. We paid more than the five Gulf States all put together, Texas iuelud ed. - -i yWe paid enough taxes to the federal government in oue year to keep our State government going for ten years. POULTRY RAISING. There are many signs, and unmis takable at that, which show that farmers and others of this section of • the country are determined to explore i the possibilities of the poultry busi fness. Persons who have rend the 'newspapers carefully during the past several months cannot doubt that a number of persons in this and other counties are going into the poultry business on a business-like basis, 'and this is the way it should be done. They have discarded the old idea of regarding chickens as barnyard pets, and are taking hold of the industry *on a large scale. Large hatcheries and poultry farms are being establish ed at various places in this section, and pure-bred stock is being secured, with modern methods and modern ap pliances used. This is a very encouraging sign and we hope the experiments will be suc cessful, and see no reasons why they ‘should not be. poultry raising is nothing new. It has been made a big business in other parts of tjie country, and it lias paid. There is no reason why our farmers should nqt be as suc cessful with it tis farmers in other parts of the country have been. Prop er application and intelligent study of the problem involved will turn the trick. Only recently a North Carolina girl won several prize's at the New York Poultry Show with her birds. She did not breed them by chance. She devoted time and attention to them, and other persons who would snake their poultry pay must do the same. The chance is here for large profits in the business if we will only tackle it in the right way. We should he able to produce enough chickens ! and eggs not only for our own mar kets, but for the northern markets, too. Ben Lacy, State Treasurer, has j adopted "economize” as bis watch- j word, and it is a good one. Mr. Lacy j does not say. however, that the State should go .backward or stand still, hut | rather he suggests that ‘fit would He { well to economise until the expenrti- j litre period is confined to the same as j the income period, otherwise this defi cit will appear and borrowing will continue .indefinitely at considerable cost in interest to the State.” , , HEART BEATS 15Y RADIO CAN BE HEARD OVERSEAS Invention of Berlin Doctor Amplifies Sound Greatly.. New York, Jan. 30. —Think of an American traveling in Europe and* at the same time being examined by bis physician in New York? It can he. done by the process of transmitting his heart bents to Ihe physicaln via radio. This is declared in advices from Germany to be made possible by « de vice created by Dr. Leo Jaeobsohu, a German physician, and demonstrated before the Berlin Medical Society. The device during the demons ra tion amplified the. heart beats so that all in the auditorium could hear them distinctly. • The same device linked to the radio, it was asserted, would permit a man to bo examined simul taneously by physicians' scattered throughout the world. President Morgan Organises New | Lutheran Church. Sa Is bury Post. Rev. j. L. Morgan, of this cry. ) president of the North Carolina Lutheran synod, was at Rocky Mount yesterday Where he officiated at the formal organisation of a new Luth eran churelL This new congregation is due to the efforts of Rev. S. Whit.; Rhyne, who bar. charge of the Lutheran mis sion work in Eastern Carolina end who makes his headquarters at Golds boro. Rev. Dr. -Morgan preached to hie Rocky Mount Luthejans Sunday meriting and the new congregation was formally launched immecijately afterward. Until arrangements can -be made for a church building the new congregation will worship in the Y. >M. C, A., at this place. Defunct Bank Building Sold at Thomas ville. Thomasville, Jan. 29.—The building and grounds on Salem street of tin? now* defunct bank of Thomasville was so d toda v at 12 o'clock bv Rev ceiver T. J. Finch for M. Bl Hite being the b ehest bidder. The sale of today will be left open for the usiial terms for a higher bid wmch is expected to be offered, as it is though by recognized authority the property is worth $25,000 at x least. This is the bank of which J. Ib. Arm field .was president and Zed Wriflitli cashier, before it went to the wall. Propose College For Army and Navy on Ihe Pacific Coast. / Sail -Diego, Calif., Jyu. 30.-*-Plans of the navy to establish at San Diego a junior war college where army and navy officers will reeoieve post-gradu ate training supplementary to that re ceived at West Point and Annapolis, were received here today from Wash ington. This college will extend in a broad way. it is announced, the work of the naval'war college at Newport giving | to the officers high in command an ex- j tynsive training in strategy and tactics. | Haywood Journal Chartered. Wayiiesville. X. .Tan. 31.—The Haywood Journal, capitalized at $lO,- 000. has been grunted a charter of in- j corporation by the secretary of state, j it way announced today. Horace Sentelle. W. C Alien. T. G. j Miller, all of Wayiiesville, are the in-! corporators. In addition tfo publish- ! ing a paper, the company will also dot a general printing business. i A Hosiery Company For Creed moor. ’ Creedmoor. N. (\, .Jan. 31.—The Wei-; worth Hosiery Company, of Creed- j moor, has been granted a charter of 1 incorporation by the secretary of state. The company has a capital stock of $50,000 and has as its princi pal inrorpora tors X. J. Buddie, J. E. Harris and Peace. \ THE CONCORD TIMES COL WAITS RESIGNS; ! Resignation Followed Issuing of Folice ( Warrant Charg ing Immoral Conduct in Connection With Woman. DOUGHTON ACCEPTS , THE APPOINTMENT Resignation Contained But Ten Words.—Senate Gets Nomination of Mr. Dough ton and Acts At Once. i Brock Barkley in Charlotte Observer. Raleigh, Jan. 2l>. —-Colonel A. 1). Watts resigned as commissioner of revenue for North Carolina today fol lowing a local newspaper publication this morning of a police search of bis rooms and the discovery of a mulatto woman beneath a bed. Shortly after receiving the resigna tion Governor Morrison appointed Representative R. A. Houghton, of Al leghany county, as the new commis sioner. He will assume the dutips of the office tomorrow, sitting tonight for! the last time as a member of the house in which he has served for over a quarter of a century. Colonel Watts requested that his resignation become effective immedi ately. stating that the affairs of Ids office were in good shape and ready to be turned over Jo his successor. It is understood in* was offered today an executive position with one of , the largest banking houses in the state. The raid on the commissioner's quarters occurred last night and this afternoon warrants were issued charg ing him with aiding and abetting pros titution. The wofifan, with another negress and y negro man. who were found in an adjoining room, were placed under arrest immediately after the raid but were later released with out hond. The mulatto, Grace Gran tham. is charged with prostitution. Robert McDuffie and Nina Bailey are charged with soliciting. The cases will be heard Saturday. Colonel Watts was appointed com- missioner of revenue by Governor, Morrison early in 1921, following an intensive campaign for the place against Alien .1. Maxwell, of the cor poration commission. His yeebrd as an official, while politically assailed' on several occasions, is generally look ed upon as above reproach. While Colonel Watts has never claimed and his staunchest friends have never contended- for him. that he | was the most moral or religious of j men, lew have doubted his absolute! fitni*s for the office he held nor t’r* high quality of his code of ethics in so far as honesty and integrity are concerned. Looked upon as a power in politics, he lias been fought polit ically as few men who have hold of fice ii) this state. His public record seems to have carried him off victor iously in these battles.only to fall be fore charges of private indiscretions. Colonel Watts made no statement. His resignation contained this brief sentence, addressed to the governor: "I herewith .hand you my resigna tion to become effective immediately." Representative .Houghton, who was sworn in as commissioner of revenue last night, has been in the public life of North Carolina for 40 years. lie has-served as lieutenant govern or and speaker of house in addi tion to his long period of service as a j house member. He lias been a champion through tills' legislature, as- well as through 1921. jif Governor Morrison's pro gram of progress.* In taking Repre sentative Houghton from the- house. Governor Morrison is robbing himself of another strong supporter in the general assembly. Representative W. N. Everett, whom ho named (secretary of state two weeks ago, was a leader in the house and an out-and-out Morrisonian. Representative Houghton lias I teen equally as enthusiastic in his cham pioning of the governor’s proposals. lie was looked upon as the probable leader of the tight for the ship line. With an -expected close vote on Hie ship hill, the absence of Mr. Dough ton and Mr. Everett from the Tisj of generals is undoubtedly a heavy, loss, though friends are confident the rep resentatives have already made up their minds to put it over. The city prosecuting attorney. C. W. Beckwith, who instructed the is suance of the warrant, stated that the prosecution of the citse against Colonel Watts wax not dependent up on whether the other defendants could be produced in court or not, and that he would proceed with the po lhenjen as witnesses if they did not appear. The Raleigh (Correspondent of The' Greensboro News says: Revenue Commissioner A. D. Watts resigned his office this afternoon fol lowing a police raid last night on liis apartments in the building in which a mulatto woman was dis covered under a bed in his room. Representative li. A. Houghton, of j Alleghany, house leader, was appoint- j ed revenue commissioner tonight by i Governor Morrison succeeding Com-i missioner Watts. Mr. Doughton ac-j copied and be was confirmed by the; Senate tonight." " The resignation of the most pic-! turesque political character known to North Carolina perhaps in 50 years followed the I visit of many personal friends who implored him to stand put and fight the charges against him.. These accusations were made in war rants this afternoon charging Grrtcc Grantham, the woman, with immoral conduct and Mr. Watts with aiding and abetting \ it. Nina Bailey and Robert McDuffie were also indicted.' Nothing that faithful friends could say to him had any tendency to dis-. sum# him. A dozen ways of minim-, izing the offense against public ulor als were suggested. There was no act of infidelity observed, the Statesville man has been sick,' nurses have been * ! necessary, the presence of the woman I could be explained. But the party _i leader in ho many hard flight cam paigns would not conspire to his own acquittal. An otter of a friend often , with him to caddie the guilt, moved the colonel not an inch. j “No, lam not going to tell a d i lie. about it.” he said. -‘1 am ruined and*T shall resign.” No amount of pleading could get him to alter his purpose, which was , to accept full blame for the plight in which he was caught. lie would not ; minify it by pleading intoxication, by | putting off any portion of the moral culpability on the woman and a negro man indicted with her. “They’ve got me,” he said, “and I am not going to tell a d- lie about it." The story which the police told was that the Watts apartment on Fayette ville street had been reported to them j and they went to his room. A knock j on the door brought the colonel to the I hall and they told him that they had I been informed some women were in ■ the room. ~ He invited them in and in looking under a cot in the room .the Grantham woman, giving her home as Statesville, was found. She was ar rested. Colonel Watts was not taken to the police station. His bond was arranged and Police Justice W. C. Harris accepted it. The justice set Saturday of thfs week for the hear- ] ing and the warrants*charging these, offenses on which the trio were ar- ! rested were issued this afternoon. j The sensational episode had as one j of its chief elements the movement' back of the raid. How it all happen ed has been the talk of the town. Var ious theories,are at work. How much of J.t was political, nobody will pro- j tend to say. It happened late at night, j not withstand which, every effort at I concealment failed,^ The bedroom of the fallen party chieftain was the objective of an un ending stream of visitors today. A political assassination these visitors generally regarded the expose, but on whom to saddle it nobody seemed to have any opinion at all. The city con trasted the attack with the spirit of the stricken. The colonel regarded himself done for and sent his eommis- J sion to his-cliief from whom he took! it little less than two yyars ago. Two Hundred Miners Caught. Berlin. Jan. ill (By the Associated Press. —Fire-damp following an explo sion has cut off 250 miners in a mine at Beutben, Polish Silesia, says a Cen tral News message. Several bodies have been recovered. There* is little hope, the message adds, of saving any of the imprisoned miners. I " —— ________ i 0 The Citizens Bank and Trust Company acknowledges grateful appreciation to its many friends who called at the formal opening of its new building last evening to extend their best wishes and congratulations to its directors and officers, to those who so kindly sent floral gifts, to the Bell v & Harris Furniture Company for the use of a splendid piano* and to all who contributed in any way to 'the suc cess and pleasure of*the evening.' ►• - ■ ' ...... rnmmmmmmmm ———MW——»i ■ „„„.,«« g<H HM, I , g X- . ~..,c / , a " fc *' '■‘"‘•** ‘*"''* l ' '•“•'•n-'**»u*M.i*«»iiBa. i «iMi*ii ■•<"•*>■ >■■l aiiiiii».>iii^ii«ii4inan •«.■<.«u. au.iiii.: ru. an .sM ia.iiii>iuau..a<in»'*> j MARDI GRAS CARNIVAL I if -1 j New Orleans Mobile Pensacola 1 Feb. 8-13, 1823, Feb. 11-13, 1923 Feb. 10-13, 1923 || Southern Railway System Announces • | j j Very Low Round /Trip Fares U \ * ’ H Nevv Orleans- Tickets on Sale Feb. G-13 inclusive Mobile— I iekets on sale Feb. 9-13, inclusive |.J [ 1 ensdcola Tickets on sale Feb. 8-13, inclusive j Final all tickets, Feb.J>oth, 1923. If presented prior to Feb. 20th, tickets may be extehd- B ed until March 7, 1923, by paying fee of SI.OO. p Five Fast Through Trains Daily § Pullman sleeping cars, observation cars, club cars, din- I ing cars and coaches. For further information and details call on nearest I agent. |j R. H. GRAHAM, Division Passenger Agent, Charlotte, N. C. Wholesale and Retail \ I ■■■■-'■■ 1 ' ■ - % > I"' p. , Grain and Feed -.*• We are prepared to furnish Contractors Uncle Sam High Grade Oats. Car arriving every week. All. kinds of Feed, wholesale and retail. Try our Pure Wheat Shorts. 6 . Richmond - Flowe Co. "SJF4IUJI 1 »aSSES2S«:.*r!B«rwa? as X. J clubbing rates. 7 A You can save ihoney by subscribing " for other papers in connection with The Times or Tribune. We will send you The Times a/d Progressive Farmer both one year lor 1 0I1 |y $2.50. This is a saving of I cents to you, and makes The Times I cost you only $1.50 a year. - ! ' We will send The Times a*nd the At , lanta Thrice-a-Week Constitution, both • one year, for $2.75. We will send you The Times and - New York Thrice-a-Week World, both i one year, for only $2.75. ( 1 The Times and McCall’s Magazine, both one year for $2.75. , The Times and Youth’s Companion, both one year for $4.15. ,i We will club any of the above , pa pers with The Tribune, adding the prices as follows to The sub scription rate: Progressive Farmer, oo| cents; Atlanta Constitution .75: New York World 75; McCalJ’s Magazine 75. If you have already paid your sub scription in advance either to The Times or The Tribune, we will order, any of the above papers for you at J just what they cost us, as indicated j above. We will * order them for you, at any time. ! NEWSBOY’S RAPID RISE IN MERCANTILE WORLD ! I Buys Big Store in Front of Which He Once Sold Papers. | Newark, N. J., Jan. 2d. —A boy who used to sell newspapers in front of the : Stoutcvnbiirg & Company clothing store | in this city 30 years ago bought out ; the store today in a transaction involv ing more than $1,000,000. The new ! owner is Barney Taylor, proprietor of a clothing store, No., 104 Market Street. The Stoutenburg store, the oldest re tail clothing store in New Jersey, was established in 1840. It occupies a tive-stor.v building at Broad and Mar ket streets, with 125-foot frontage on each street. In front of the store young Barney Taylor set up a newsstand when he was a bare-legged boy of 11 years, just I arrived from Philadelphia. He pros pered and later established a clothing ! store. Several years ago he bought a four-story building a few blocks from the Stoutenburg store, where he in stalled IPs clothing store. The Eastern international dog-led derby ;n Quebec next month will com prise a series of three 50-mues Heats, one heat to be run off each day. Trespass Notices, 10 Cents for Six at Tribune and Times Office. fh'ursHay, February f, 192.3, Many Legion • Rocky Mount. N. (’., Jak* 30. ' pioximately 150 new menAHXm,,, been added to the roll of the I( _ Pitt post of the American Legion. the result of a campaign* just < u;ni ed. J. W. Council, chairman, h. ... nonneed. i 1 IN MEMORIAM Oscar Krimminger, Who Died Febm ary 2nd, 1920. Three years ago you left us, dear For a fairer, brighter home: And our hearts are always saddi: 1 When we see your vacant eliair. / y But again some time, my dear. When our days of life have lied ; In Heaven above well meet yon. Where no good-bye tears are si.<-,| MOTHER ANI) FAMI i.\. PENNY COLUMN Silver‘Skin and Yellow Danver Onion sets. 11. M. Biackwelder Feed 1-1 t-p. .* * Our Fruit Trees, Vines, Plants, etc., are now . ready. ' Crowell’s Plant Farm, 129 E. Corbin St. 9-ts-c. The 801 l Weevil May Come and the boll weevil may go. but the <i<*:u h wagon rolls on forever. Take mir a 0 Jefferson Standard policy and die !,,- it. A. L. Perdue & 'Son, I >i>* 1 jet managers, Concord, N. C. Pimm* 557. 31-1 t-p. l-2t-p. • Wise Buys For Wise Guys—Bedsteads springs, steel cots, dresser, dinu a* ' pkites, closing out. Many thing* your own price buys. Numerous items not in sufficient number to ad vertise. Store is to be torn down and I have no place to move. r. Patt Covington. • 1-lt-p. For Sale er Trade —Horse Ten Yean old, or wil] trade for cattle. \Y. Kesler. / 29-2 t-p. Good Two or Three-Horse Farm For rent. Frith or without stock. Henry M. Winecoff. g‘9-4f-p. Feed Meat Scraps to Your Hens and get eggs. 11. M. N Biackwelder Fe d Store. 1-1 t-p. Land For Rent Near Kannapolis. See Mrs. M. J. Biackwelder,'lvannapnlis Route 2, box 123. 29-2! -p. The Signing of the Declaration of in dependence was a great thing. Alsu the day YOU sign for a Jefferson Standard policy for the protection of your family will be a wonderful day for your loved ones. A. L. Perdue & Son, District Managers. Concord, N. C., Phone 587. 31-lt-p. l-2t-p. Wanted—Hickory Logs. Will Pay highest prices. Send for specif' 1- tions. Ivey Manufacturing Co., • Hickory, N. C. 25-1 n-p. Concord Has a Mattress Renovating' plant. The Southern Mattress Com pany is located at No. 9 M<<;iii Stt*ee.t, equipped with the latest ma chinery, and prepared to do thi> work with experienced workmen. All work called for and delivered ♦flie same day. Satisfaction guar anteed. Why send your mattresses away, when they can be made over at home? ' 15-ts-c. ■*_ Steam Tractor In Good Shape. Will sell cheap or swap in. J. W. Starnes, Locust, N. C. 8-ts. What Is a Jefferson Standard Policy? Well, one of the 39 different plans is as follows: Take a $5,000 policy and your beneficiary is immediately protected for this amount, if ymu death i$ by accident it pays Slo.ooo. which is double the amount. If you lose your health and can't work, you pay no more on your policy- and you receive $50.00 per month as long ns you live, and on top of this your' beneficiary receives at your death the full $5,000 insurance. If \vc ever find that we can do better ilmn * this may do it. Insure in He* Jefferson Standard today. A. b. Perdue & Son, Concord. N. <7 Phone 587. 31-11-I*. l-2t-p. For Sale—Two Brood Mares, 5 and K ycsvfs old, and also good mule. Will sell at bargain. R. B. Little. < mi-' cord, Route 5. 28-1 t-p. No Hunting With Gun on My Land. \V. L. Morris. - Nov. 27-txf Feb 25. Enamel Ware ,and Tin MISS BRACHEN j BONNET SHOP PRICES LOW 1 CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET Corrected Weekly by Cline & Moose. I Figures named represent prices p3bl for produce on the market: Eggs »-1 • Butter * _ _ .30 /Country Ham Country Shoulder .IS . Country Sides _-.15 Young Chickens Hens * is ! Turkeys Oy to .30 'Lard ____ .jo 1-2 ! Sweet Potatoes .75 ■ IHsh Potatoes .75 j Onions 5i.75 • Peas ” '51.50 Corn ~ ,S 5 l Corn .'*> CONCORD COTTON MARK El ’. I THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 11123. , Cotton x ___ _ -j~ 1 J , Cyttpn Seed .72 j'— , * •’tSE THE PBS NY COLUMN—IT P-Vl 3
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 1, 1923, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75