•iCpTay, ’ylarch 19. 1923 * 4 ************ g'iOVTIIA UKIHOfIHAiaM * 7 H 10 M 80NINa«MVll * f -tk ♦ * ENOCH VILLE. i: Vivian Powell lias been irnlis- T ! a Ijor home lor The past few . n Thompson is also on the ii>.f this week. * v.. ::!<• requested to announce that , vi *\ Antaleau Carter spent Sunday with Misses Ethel and Nettie Black* welder. Miv L. I*. Black welder spent a few hours Monday with Mrs. Nellie Bea ver. Misses Antoloan Carter. Ethel and Nettie Blaekwelder spent a while Sun il ay at Mr. E. A. Cruse's. \[>s l-Ntella Penninger spent ' the week-end with home folks. Mrs. Daisy Emly and two children. Martin, and Ralph, spent Monday af ternoon with Mrs. (1. I. Carter. Mi*-s Ethel Black welder and her laother, .Johnnie. sjiem Saturday af term on with .Miss Antaleon Carter. Mrs. Frank Pink aml son. doe. spent Monday, with Mr. and Mrs. How ard Ilea vet*. Ruby deliver and t\vaoe Hhtli. Yankee home run slugger, ac- CUS]l >* Ruth of attacking her during motor flips to Long Island, was filed u tlu New York County Clerk’s office "mty by George Feinberg, her lawyer. . I complaint alleges that Ruth is ! ’• father of a child as yet unborn to '* Ks bixon. INi ‘FD states sends ITS REPLY TO ALLIES In li«-gait| to Payment of Cost of Ani ''ivaii Army of Occupation on the Rhine. Washington. March 17. —The Amer ''•■fly to tin* allied suggestions for |j pu V 111. lit of tli<‘ $250,000,000 spent by 1 I iiitoii states in maintaining its I""!* n| i the Rhine was forwarded 1 ‘ to Paris, it was understood to ' hne th<* suggestion that the value j’, Gormttn ships be deducted Rn troop bill, but not to eonsti !' a tint reduction of the allied Mans. 1 '!' l,:r :20 and will form one of the coaches of the Rotary Special, leaving Charlotte tonight for Charleston, when* tin* district meeting of Rotary clubs will be held Tuesday and Wed nesday. Special ears from other points will also be put on the Rotary Special at Charlotte. According to one road foreman con nected* with the company building the road from Charlotte to Concord, the work of pouring the. concrete on the road probably will start about April 15th. Much work is yet to be done before the concrete can be poured, the foreman is reported as saying, but if the weather is favorable at nil, it is believed this work can be. completed by the middle of the next month. The work will be started at the Charlotte end of the road. Quite an interesting Sunday School Institute was held a* Pin** Bluff yes terday nfterlioon. Concord persons attending the Institute could not get across Buffalo Creek at Georgeville on account of the high water, and had t** detour via Howell’s. Last night the Methodist Church in Mt. Pleasant was packed to capacity for the Insti _tute. The last Institutes will be held next Sunday, at Shiloh Church in No. 3 in the afternoon and at the Brown Mill Church in Nd. 2 in the evening. ‘’See a good many people from Ca barrus in Salisbury now.” a resident of Salisbury remarked to a Concord citizen last week. ‘ The people live in No. 5 township,” the Salisbury mer chant continued.” and are coining here because Rowan has a tine road to the county line connecting with No. 5 township in Cabarrus county.” There has been much complaint about the road from Concord into No. 5, and it is probable that the county mad forces will Ik* put to work on the road as soon as possible. WEATHER FORECAST. Generally fair with a cold wave to night: temperature below freezing to tin* coast tonight ; Tuesday fair, cold er on the coast, and slightly warmer in extreme west, rapidly .rising tem pera turn Wednesday. Lenine, Premier of Russia, Continues to Regain Health. Mosovv. March 10.—Nokilae Lenine, bolshevik premier who wais stricken several days ago with apoplexy, con tinues to show improvement, accord ing to the official bulletin issued to day. was noted in the general health and speech and in the use of the patient s right arm. His temperature was 30.0 cent grade (about 98 Fahrenheit) and his pulse 84. Roberta Cemetery. All who are interested in the up keep of the cemetery at Roberta (Fair view) Methodist Protestant, ate re quested to come to the church Friday morning, the 23rd instant, with hoes, shovels and wheel harrows or if im possible to bring tools come ariyway. J. T. SISK. ‘‘Women are not suitable substitutes for men in the eugineroom of a ship at sea,” say marine, engineering ex perts. THOMAS F. LITAKER < DIES IN CALIFORNIA Former Concord Man Passes Away as the Result of an Auto Accident. A Fellows; Cal., paper of recent date contains (he following, which will he of interest in Concord and Cabarrus: As quickly and silently as the dawn- j ing of day, he less ns for another world, .lust twelve hours from the i time he was within oqr midst, a strong and stalwart man, greatly beloved for] his loyalty to his friends, his smiling and happy personality, and his kind ness and generosity lowan) all —God’s messenger had* summoned him. We wiio remain here cannot realize that l:is place is vacant as his radiant spir it is ever with us and Ik* likewise will live forever in our memory its a sym bol of all that is good and noble in mankind. Thomas Franklin Li taker was horn nt Concord. N. C., May ID, 1872, and died at - Fellows, California, March 5, 1923 aged 51. as a result of an auto mobile accident—the blinding lights of an on-coming car, causing the driv er of tin* car in which Mr. L'itaker rode, to onitsiz<» at Sprechles curve. Inis terrible catastrophe could have been avoided had the driver of (his car used die proper lights Thus do we pay dearly for experience. He leaves a wife., Adeline Rosalie, resid ing at Fellows, and three children by a former marriage. Kenneth W., age 21, attending Trinity College, at Dur ham. N. C.. Margaret, age 19 and Frank Thomas, age 15, of Concord. N. ('., and a brother, Joseph W., of Con cord. N. C. lie came to Fellows. September 5, 1910, where lie had sine** made his home and carried on his various busi ness enterprises. He lirst established a barber shop which he operated un til it was destroyed by tie**, and later in 1911 he built and operated flu* Fel lows Theatre, now known as the* Star Theatre. During this period Mr. Litaker was working an on invention, which has oven in tliis_Short time, made its mark in history—the Rotary Disc Bit. which lu* perfectly] in 1911 and patented in 1912. A corporation was formed which is today reaping vast benefits from his invention, even though Mr. Lita ker did not share in them, having sold out his interest in 1922. In fact, the success obtained at Signal Hill is due to the use of this particular hit. lie was also the inventor of several other minor oil appliances. In 1920. 1921 and 1922 lie ran the Fellows Hotel and also operated bar ber shops in Fellows, hut later sold out these interests, and since Septem ber. 1922, was employed at Sanderson's in Fellows." At the time of his death he owned considerable property here. Mr. Litaker was a member of til** Odd Fellows Lodge. Newton 444, of Follows, California, and in respect to him the merchants of Follows, will close their establishments from 9 to 11 a. m. on Thursday. Funeral services will he at the Taft 1 'mlertaking Parlors, Thursday. March S. 1923. at 9 a. m. Interment will he at the Cnion cemetery Mau soleum.. Bakersfield, at 11:30 a. m.. odd Fellows officiating. (Mr. Litaker was a son of Ale. Eph raim Litaker, of No. 4 township, and formerly lived in Concord, where lie pursued the trade of a barber. He left here about 13 years ago for Cal ifornia.- —Editor). DEATON NAKOWLY ESCAPES DROWNING IN YADKIN RIYER Car Washed Oft' in Flood at Ap proach of Brid,go Over River at Yadkin. Spencer, March 18.—W. C. Deaton, of .Charlotte, connected with the Char lotte Ford Motor company, narrowly escaped death by drowning near here tonight when his automobile, in which he was returning to Charlotte from Greensboro, was washed off the fill on the approach to the bridge over the Yadkin river. Mr. Deaton's ear was carried to a point in the flood waters where if. was impossible for him to swim on account of the swift current, and the water too deep to regain the shove by wading. He was rescued after about an hour spent clinging to the top of his ear. by being pulled in at the eml of a rape attached to a mule. Mr. Deaton’s car was among sev eral automobiles washed off the till approaching the Yadkin bridge . March 16.—The Department of Commerce announced tonight that according to reports made to the Bureau of the census the value of products of establishments engaged primarily in the dyeing and finishing of textiles (exclusive of that done in textile mills) amounted to $272,837,000 in 1021. as compared with $323,008,000 ! in 1010, and $100,201,000 in 1014, a de crease of 10 per (cent, from 1010 to 1021, hut an increase of 130 per cent, for the seven-year period. 1 Os the 503 establishments report ing products valued at $5,000 or more in 1021, 7 were in North Carolina; 158 in Pennsylvania; 140 in New York; 350 in New Jersey; 02 in Massachu setts: 30 in Rhode Island: 12 in Con necticut: 12 in Illinois: 0 in Ohio; 4 each in Maryladn and Missouri; 3 each in Indiana. Kentucky and South Carolina; 2 each in Delaware, Geor gia. .Michigan, Minnesota. Tennessee and Wisconsin: 1 each in Alabama. California, Florida, Maine, Mississippi and West Virginia. ! Massachusetts, the leading state in the industry in 1921, reported 34 per cent, of the total values of products in ! that year. i ! Mississippi Tornado Killed 28 Persons. J Memphis, Term., March 17. —The hu l ninn toll in the tornado which swept northwest Mississippi Thursday was jincreased to 2s tonight with tin* death in a .Memphis hospital of Mrs. M. 11. Rich, injured when her home sit Sav age was demolished, the receipt of be lated advices from Batesville report ing th*‘ death of five negroes in a farm j settlement near that town and further ! reports of four negroes killed near j llock Ilill in Panalo county. I Mica mining in the United States ! started early in the nineteenth een- I tury. in New Hampshire, which State ! supplied all the domestic production ! until about 1868, when mining was ! started in North Carolina and other states. A St. Louis woman has kept a di iry for 36 years; not a day ras been S as*:,. II t! - _ I Wm iff , 1 The two essentials of banking are security . p Ml and service. Ii < fe 'M M II -j V.\ During its .eighteen years, this batik has grown to a position of financial strength bv the practice of hanking methods which assure to de positors the security of their funds. ji ... I II IJ On this foundation,'it has developed a broad range of service by which it seeks to promote the ' | financial and business interests of its customers. i! g i IS . Citizens Bank and Trust Company i»l . . • • f • • ; ' > i •-I Concord, North Carolina i.lB r If CHAS. B. WAGONER, A. F. GOODMAN, President Cashier. ill ll mm - t I I 1 YOU’D TAKE THIS ! MAN’S OPINION ABOUT “STOCK” ij —WHY NOT ABOUT SUITS? B R . He’s a local man—he has made and saved easily SIOO,OOO and here’s a remark that fell from his lips in l this store right on to the ear drums of our Advertising man — “Boys, I was open to be shown and you v | have convinced me that with your clothing J ' your stock and your values you are entitled to the biggest business in 1 Concord” — ■ That’s what we’re out gunning for^ Here’s the ammunition: lAlco Suits $30.00 to $40.00 | Knox Hats $7.00 to SB.OO Superior Union Suits $2.00 to $5.00 Bates Street Shirts $2.00 to $5.00 Browns - Cannon Co. Where You Get Your Money’s Worth I' 1 I J Fish Fertilizer j 1 p i 1 v j| Cars arriving every day. We sell the ~ 'I 1 * *3 §ji| - • • • " II Highest Grade Fertilizer obtainable 1 at very close prices. Mixed Fertilizer, *• 1 Kainit, Acid and Nitrate of Soda.j We j will serve you with care and prompt- j LI ness. ra | ; I"• B ; J ! Richmond - Flowe Co. 1 I 1 ■ I .-y-'-'rTTTTT'rTT'T '"‘"'TTy r"H' * I Exquisite in Design— Handsome in Material — ■ ■ N Unsurpassed in Style- Are the “Fiskhats” We Are Showing. | SPECIALTY HAT SHOP j"> jooooooooqqqpQOQociooQoeoeoooooo<30ooooeocx)Ooocxx>oooooo OUR PENNY AOS. ALWAYS GET THE RESULTS . i- PAGE THREE