Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / June 13, 1927, edition 1 / Page 5
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■ June !.'■ W 27 iTC 1E T Y ! lr mm i H * * ■ ! y: '! ■ j! uni Wide and Hem |H stitched. t r.>< k lias al- HH,-".wi'ii women of |H )■;, oil. t his sca ,, di frocks in and ■H example of in jicacli, one H>;:iv tints in which HI !: .... shown. The ■ : l’r- i*>*ii knots carry |§H :less and tire -mart warm .. a large hair brim bound i rovn banded jfH wiih black vel- .• :;i:ce;tn-nl> have in ( 'uncord : liftin'.’ K.iitt <'oushing |H the marr age of her Emma ('onshing Hi n» : oliscnlicimer |H May 14th. 1927 Virginia ’ j H. (\ H^B. • meat comes as HB a friends of I >r. Concord. a beautiful |H . '.'l of Haiti more. Md.. there with I^B’:.'", Mr-. < 'oushing. for years. son of Mr. |B. Mi'. !;lmiiii..r, of Con- H' ..ai. a i.is education in l graduated 1 aivci -ity of North |B <■ ■liiidor»-il his medical |H i of Maryland. that the friends leant that they will in Concord. BH il dcLConconl. B ?ii. at inlay were th(> fol « Mm. Hall. Chnr- B IniKniim Kichmond. B9" 1 • iingx'ti. Jack^on ■ . It. Carmichael. Balti- H 1 1.. I.uy. Charlotte; t -i'arv : Hamilton B"": Mr. and Mrs. S. H. B M—.: C. s. Wood. B Mr. and Mm. W. H. B ' Navy; ,\1 Sckneider. B 1■: Mr. ami Mm. I*. H. B;c * Kirg. Durham. 1 )m ham. BIR-OLD m hiU.KI) 15V Al TO in (ireenshoio. By X «■-. dime 12.— lioy B‘ n "-H'ar-old -son of Mr. "• Itolicrson. three B>|n Charlotte, was hi re 1 r, " i :‘. v when struck by driven l,y J i r . s. R. Bhis Bnf_.M-.-iin., M | this morn r,'" " :| Wentworth V ''l'.vierian church B"‘/ !i " hr Taylor B :1 ’"’yd f Sol HI awaiting ■ ip ri, - v court here next B " ILL UK H ( dM LilKNt F. TOPIC Bii‘ i '.V lm,ai Meet- B ,>e il'ld Tonight. B":; •' '*i'- H».—(/P)— The ■ " uf l*u»k for the 1 1,1 if lining dune :10 B/; , . ,1 tl ’" n ' lir hy I’re.si- B . n ' ,liai ’ f* a ! > ". expected to |H] ;i< i'' 1 ’! 1,|,,s "i" » ; tx redue ‘*i' ‘■ l ' f 'd is in j>ros ■ «'f next (on attended Bto? V"' H " M,, >cutt Linds Bs’vm" ,iarrols of Beer. Bw. ir “"■'“• vtuu BhiiN,!... • b,, ° r 111 -No. 1 Ba- ; h w as re- B tj!u ' ! > x <c i' nfu Offico m "’ere partly B'Ds s-|; i' U ' V l . il l ,at, hos B after* ' J i "‘ beer "as found. B^i'lhirv'i' 1 ' boilt l 'egatta j* - i! -' w iU be held ■ M<t. 17-18. PERSONALS. Miss Millicent Ward is visiting . relatives and friends in Asheboro and Randleman. W • Mr. and Mrs. W. A v Ridenhout and son spent the week end at Chim ney Rock. * • -« Mr. and Mrs. Luther Burrage and children were the guests Sunday ;•) Salisbury of Mns. J. P. Rodgers. * * * J Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Blackwelder | and son spent Sunday at Chimney (Rock. 1 * * - I Rev. and Mrs. C. R. Allison and (.children of ‘New I London were the | guest Saturday of Mr. and Mrs. } Luther Burrage. • * • I Mrs. R. M. Cook and son have re (turned from Durham where they at tended commencement at Duke Uni versity. They were accompanied home by Mr. Cook who went for them on Saturday. * * * Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Townsend of Ivexington, Mr. and Mrs. George j Deal, of Mathews, and Mr. and Mrs. H. I\ Townsend, of Kannapolis, were the week end guests of Mrs. John Price. * * * Mr. v and Mrs. E. B. Grady and children and Mrs. Wade Kluttz and son have returned from Wrightsville Beach where they spent several days. * ♦ * Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Blackwelder . were guests of relatives in Rock Hill, S. C., Sunday. m Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Ridenhour. and children, of Salisbury, visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. V. 1 Elliott Sunday. * * * Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Fisher, of Rockwell, spent Sunday in the city 1 with Mr. and Mrs. ,L T. Fisher. ‘ They were accompanied home by Mrs. S. R. Fisher, who has been ‘ visiting here several days. * * * Mr. and Mrs. L. C, Sappenfield, ' of Charlotte, spent Sunday here with relatives. • * * Mr. and Mrs. E. H. ''Troutman and son, Harold, of Colleton, S. C., are visiting at the home of Mrs. L. C. Troutman. » * • Mrs. J. T. Coggins and children are visiting relatives in Durham. * * * Mrs. L. P. Dabbs and children, of Mt. Holly, arc visiting Mrs. Dabbs father, D. F. Joyner. w J. P. Morrison, of Pioneer Mil’s, is undergoing treatment at the Char lotte Sanatorium • • • T. C. Henry, of Graham, visited relatives in the city Sunday. m * m Mrs. C. P. Cline has returned from Wilmington where she visited her daughter, Mrs. Dan McCurdy. She was accompanied home by her granddaughter. Claudiue McCurdy, who will vicit here several weeks. Mrs. J. L. McKay and Miss Annie Hoover left this morning for Asheville, where they Will attend summer school at the Asheville Normal. * * Miss Letha Snyder left today for Wake Forest College, where she will study for several weeks. m m m Judge John M. Oglesby lias re turned to Greensboro, after spending the week-end at bis home here. m m m Mrs. Hinton McLeod, of Brevard, is the guest of Mrs. E. C. Barnhardt, Jr., for several days. x + •» -m Mrs. A, A. Bennett has returned to Hiddenite after spending several days in Concord. She was accom panied home by Mr. Bennett, who joined her here for the week-end. • ♦ • Ben Matthews, of "Winston-Salem, spent Sunday in Concord. Mrs. Mat thews, who has been, visiting her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Goodeon, re turned home with him. / «s * * Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cline and chil dren, of Salisbury, spent Sunday in Concord with relatives. Dr. Fred M. Patterson, of Greens boro, spent the week-end here with relatives. ■9 * m Mrs. R. B. Rankin and children went to Blowing Rock today, where they will spend the summer with Mrs. Rankin’s mother, Mrs. M. E. Weedon. They were accompanied by Dr. Rank i in, who went up for t'he day. il* - - Miss Lucy Richmond Lentz and r Miss Emily Hammond arrived in Con ; cord Saturday from Washington, D. C., to be the guests of Miss Elizabeth Smith. Miss Hammond went on to Columbia, Sunday afternoon to - visit relatives. • * » Mr. and Mrs. Adam Kluttz, of Ta baro. are visiting at the home of Mr. 1 Kluttz's parents, Mr. and Mrs. ? George S. Kluttz, for several days. I * • -* Mr. and Mrs, G. G. Allen and sons, * George and Tom Walton, of Kan napolis, spent Saturday in Morganton 5 with Mrs. Allen’s mother. Mrs. Tom " Walton. They were joined there by ■ Misses Lola Walton and Miss Ma ' rie Pearson, the party gojng on to 1 Mount Mitchell for Sunday. w w m Mr. and Mrs. Frank Minter, Mrs. s John F. Yorke and Frank Yorte, of Charlotte, spent Sunday here with * Mrs. B. F. Rogers. 1* * * Mrs. J. I. Davis aiul. daughters. Misses Minnie Hili,. and Betsy y motored to Washington. D. C., f witness the Lindbergh celebration, s* * * John Porter, who is a patient in the Charlotfe : Sanatorium, is doing as well i as can be expected. Mrs. Porter, who 1, is staying in Charlotte, spent last night in Concord, but returned to^ I Charlotte this morning to be with Mr. 1 Porter. *m , m va T a yl°r and Miss Janie Kluttz are in Salisbury attending the grand Chapter meeting of the Eastern Star, which is being held there today and tomorrow. ’ 1 * >'• * • Miss Annie Ferguson, of Statesville, has been ill for several days. Her sister, Mrs. George Price, of Concord, spent the week end there, returning when Miss Ferguson’s condition con tinued to show improvement. I ,* m * , Mrs. W. H. Wadsworth is in New York, where she to be with Dr. M adsworth, who underwent n slight , operation there last week. \ + * * Mrs. L. L. Self, of Cherryville, is the guest of Mrs. Bruce Mcßride,'em South Union street, ” • * * Thomas J. White, of Durham,, spent the week-end in the county with hi? parents, Mr. an< Mrs. T. J. White. -* * * Mr. and Mrs. Ross Cannon, of York, S. C., are the guests of Mrs. J. W. Cannoa, Sr. CAROLINA STUDENTS ATTEND SCHOOL HERE Teachers Trained in Local College Bring Back Trio From Concord, N. C., for Music Course. Maryville, Mo., Democrat-Forum. - When Harvey Bush, a former stu dent at the State Teachers College re turned from Concord, N. C., last Sep tember; where he had been looking as- ( ter his position as director of music in the Concord schools, he brought with him a young man who had been grad uated the previous spring from the Concord schools. Luther Blackwelder came “west” to study in this college. This spring, when Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bloomfield, graduates of the State Teachers College, returned to Mary ville from their year’s work in the Concord High School, they brought with them another young man and his siter, George and Miss Mary Lee Peck. All three of them have en tered the department of public school mueic, and plan to complete their courses here before returning home. Although North Carolina is making rapid strides in the field of education, its colleges have not advanced in the field of public school.music as have the colleges in the middle west. Miss Day vault Bride of H. Cleo Over cash. Kannapolis, June' 11.—Miss Dema Dayvault, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Dayvault and 11. Clio Over cash, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Over cash, were married Wednesday at the St. Johns Reformed parsonage, Rev. Lee A. Peeler officiating. The ceremony was solemnized in the presence of immediate relatives and friends. Miss Ruth Sills was ipaid of-honor and Dwight E. Walter, of this city, accompanied the bridegrqom as best limn. . r Following the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Overcash left for a tour of west ern North Carolina and on their re turn \vill be at home in Kannapolis. Cannon Dance Tonight. A social event of much interest is the dance being given this evening at Hotel Concord by Misses Anne and Mary Cannon honoring their guests, Misses Barbara Newell, Marie Ander son and Ray Anderson. Dancing will be enjoyed from nine until one. A number of out-of-town guests have been invited, as well as v many of the dancing set of Concord. Senator Overman to Be at Kannapo lis. The sesqui-centeunial of the Amer ican flag will be fittingly observed in the lobby of the Kannapolis Y. M. C. A. on the night of June 14th at 7 :45. Mrs. E. C. Gregory, of Salisbury, State Regent of the D. A. R., and her father. United States Senator Lee S. Overman will be present and make a brief address. 1 Members Invited to Eastern Star Dance. All members of the Eastern Star who plan to attend the Grand Chap ter meeting in Salisbury tomorrow, are invited to attend the dance to be given tomorrow night. The dance is for the entire membership and not just for officers, as was first reported here. Undergoes Operation. Earl Henderson Brown, who is a i patient at the University of Penn sylvania Hospital, in Philadelphia, underwent another operation on Sun day. Message received today stated that his physicians were more hopeful for his recovery. War Mothers to Meet. The Cabarrus Chapter of Ameri can War Mothers will meet Tuesday afternoon at 4 o'clock at the home of Mrs. J. W. B. Long on South Union Street with Mesdames M. L. Buchan anan, G. W. Means. S. A. Wolff host esses with Mrs. Long. Jay L. Cannon, Jr., Undergoes Opera tion. Jay Lee Cannon, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Cannon, underwent an operation for appendicitis at the Con cord Hospital Saturday night. It is reported that his condition is much improved. Visited in Concord. Greenville, S. C. News. Miss Bee Sterling and Mies Helen Bozeman have returned from Concord, N. C., where they visited friends dur ing the series of Weidemeyer dances. _________ * Son Bom. / Mr. and Mrs*. Everett Beaver, who reside on Mulberry street, announce the birth of a son on Saturday, June 11th. . ' . . ; — : —r ' V Today V ShOrt Story. V ( 1 “Wbatj/caiV I' doj£for yqu?”; asked IA. L.‘ Lightfoot, prude mmffiant, cos Kansas City. His customer burned out to be his sister, 84, whom he had not seen for 57 years. Cigarettes are now turned out by machines at the rate of 2,000 a min ute. ’ • * V THE CONCORD TIMES FLAG DAY. 150th Birthday of Old Glory Will Be e Celebrated Tuesday. e Washington, D. C., June 13. —At 1 - a' lantic and Pacific shores and the long y stretches from Puritan New England to the torrid mezas, where Indian and Spaniard roam, tomorrow will resound , with the acclamations of a free peo r pie in celebration of Flag Day, which , this year marks the 150th anniversary l of the adoption of the Stars and • Stripes as the national ensign. In all the large citips and in the town halls and school houses of small f villages and hamlets * alike the days !• when the hand : madd symbol of a body t of united colonists fighting for self respect and liberty and will be re called and the story of the struggle 5 for the maintenance of an asserted 1 independence will be told in oration, recitation and music. , For nearly two-seore years now ' June 14th has been recognized in the } United States as Flag Day and in the celebrafion of the day itself the woman . who originated the idea of such an occasion has been almost overlooked. Alice B. Sanger, of Indianapolis, is the mother, of Flag Day. The first organized celebration in j honor of the flag was held in the post office department in this city in 1908. ~ Miss Sanger not only originated the [ idea, but the ceremonies by which the day was observed. Since then the custom has spread into all depart ments of governmental service. The • day is now recognized by a patriotic demonstration almost as great as that of the Fourth of July, with addresses Jby the cabinet members, who are the heads of their respective departments. Authenticated tradition tells us that the first United States flag, made after the design adopted by Congress on June 14, 1777, was made in 1776 by Mrs. Elizabeth Ross of Philadelphia, known as Betsy Ross. This flag was - made by hand under the personal di rection of General Washington, and when completed was used at his head quarters. . It is supposed that the first display of the Stars and Stripes at u military post was at Fort Schuyler, on the present site of Rome, N. Y. The fort was beseiged early in the month of August, 1777, and the garrison was without a flag. So they, made one according to the prescription of Con gress by cutting up sheets to form the white stripes, bits of a woman’s red petticoat to form the red stripes and the blue ground for the stars , was composed of the army coat be longing to Captain Abraham Swart- ( out. ; Paul Jones, as commander 'Of the | Ranger, to which he was appointed June 14, 1777, claimed that he was i the first to display the Stars and ’ Stripes on a naval vessel. It is prob- j > able that the flag was first unfurled 11 in battle on the banks of the Brandy- I wine September 11, 1777, the first battle after its adoption. It first ap- j* pea red over a stronghold June 28, 1 1778, when Captain Rathbone, of the 1 American sloop-of-war Provideiiq§. ’ captured Fort Nassau, New Provj-, dence, Bahama Islands. John Singleton Copley, the eminent American painter, claimed to be the first to display the flag in Great j Britain. On the day when George 111. acknowledged the independence of the United States (December 5, 1872) ] he painted the flag in the background of a portrait. To Captain Moores, of the whaling ship Bedford, doubt less is due the honor of first display the Stars and Stripes in a port of 1 Great Britain. His ship arrived in. ; the Downs with “Old Glory” flying at the fore February 3, 1784. p Ruth and Lazzeri Add Four Home Buns. Chicago, June 12. —The home run . hitters whaled away merrily last j week, led by Babe Ruth and Tony ( Lazzeri of the New York Yankees, with four apiece, and scored'so cir- f euit drives in the past seven days, 26 for the National, and 24 for the / American leaguers. Lazzeri approached the major ; league record by getting three of his ‘ four in one game on Wednesday, . while 'Ruth got two of his quartet . Saturday. The Babe is now one day ahead of his record breaking 1921 schedule. t The first three sluggers in the Na- j jtional league, Hack Wilson, Rogers Horsby and Earl Webb, -made two j apiece this week, Webb’s 10th drive < into the bleachers starting the Cubs | off to victory'today. t The summer campaign for the light 1 harness horses will begin in earnest I the week of July 11, when thte Grand Circuit season will open at Toledo. LARGE BRIM HATS GROW LARGER Fashion decrees that the hat for mid-summer wear must have a large brim. Well, here they are in a good va- - riety, with large sized crowns. Your immediate selection is suggested. $2.95 $3.95 #%' m “$8.95 ! p ISHER’S JL THE SMARTEST ALWAYS | I ] — : —1 MAIN STREET. It.doesn’t matter where it liee; Its vivid lights may blind our eyes, Or may it be a narrow way, That only knows the gleam of day. It matter if it seems A pathway builded out of dreams Or if it is a sombre place Without a leavening of grace. Its buildings may stand tall and slim Against the smokescreen’s farthest rim Or it may.boast a general store A postoffice, and nothing more. Great crowds may pass—the high, the lpwly— Or just one person, moving slowly, May wander by wee, meager shops, Toward "the dim verge where Main Street stops. J But—be its pavements white or brown Be it in village, city, town— The place of which we are a part Owns Main Street as its pulsing heart! / —Margaret E. Sangster. BOYS SHOT WHILE BEATING A RIDE Sawed-Off Shot Gun Used on Three Youthful Hoboes as Freight Train Comes to a Stop at Barber. Statesville Daily. Three boys who were “beating” a ride on 4 westbound freight train Thursday night, were given drastic treatment at Barber about 1 o’clock this morning when some unknown party peppered them* with shot. Two of the young men were left here at an early hour this morning, one of them having to secure hospi tal attention, and a smaller boy, about 13 years of age, said to have been more seriously Injured by shot, was taken on to his home in Ashe ville. . . . / The young man who received the bulk of the first discharge of the unknown man’s sawed-off shot gun gives his name as Lloyd E. Davis, 24 years of age, of Concord- Davis states that his assailant, whom he took to be an officer, as the train was edming to a standstill at Barber, threw a flash light 011 him and immediately fired, the entire load taking effect in his face, arms and chest. He heard the “gqnner” shoot two or three times afterward, each time a» hobo being the object of attack. Davis was not aware of what happened to the other hoboes, as he said he was suffering so much that he had to bf helped into a box ear —a negro man playing the Good Samaritan act —and was brought to Statesville. •* Davis explains that he had worked in a eotton mill in Kannapolis for the past few months and had given up that job to go to Oteen where he hoped to secure employment. Another young man. George Whitt, of Greensboro, received one shot in the arm. He and the young man Davis are being detained here while the Railway authorities are making an investigation with a view bo determining who • did the promiscuous shooting. So far, no charge has been brought against the two young men held here. BANKRUPTCY ORDER VACATED BY WEBB Previous Order Had Been Issued in Delaware Against Charlotte Cor poration. Charlotte. June 10.—The bank ruptcy order against the Southern Status Finance Company, issued in United States district court here several months ago. Thursday was vacated by Judge E. Yates Webb. The action of the court was in line with a recent, decision, by. Judge Hugh M. Morris, of Delaware that a bankruptcy order issued in the Delaware district court took pre cedence over the action here due -to the fact that the corporation was or ganized under the Delaware law. The affairs or iiie company be came involved in September 1926 when North Carolina creditors filed a petition for appointment of a re ceiver by the Delaware federal court. The petition was granted in-Novem ber 1926 and Edward S. Cannon of Trenton named receiver. An • an cillary action was filed here by 11. B- Adams of Waxhaw. in an effort to secure assets of the company here. In August 1926 Mr. Adams had been appointed receiver by the State courts here and Judge Webb ordered him to turn over the assets to Mr. Cannon. Mr. Adams declined to do this and was cited for con tempt . Mr. Adams also filed suit for $438,000 against officials and di rectors of the company alleging fraud and missmanagement. D. A. R. CHAPTERS TO _ OBSERVE FLAG DAY Practicably Every Chapter In State To Offer Flag Day Program On Tuesday. New Bern, June IS.'—Flag Day will be celebrated Tuesday by prac tically every chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution in North Carolina, as the sesqui-eentennial an niversary of the adoption of the Aon ‘ erican flag by the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia on June 14, 1777. These meetings will be the last of* the summer season for the D. A. R. , chapters in the state, although the committee work will be continued throughout the summer. The chapter meetings will be resumed in the fall. The Flag Day programs are held every year by the organization. This year special attention will be paid to the 150th anniversary of the flag adoption. The work,done during the year also by various regents and mem bers in the formation, of living flags in cooperation with the United States Flag association has also encouraged more interest in the celebration of the day. At the recent Continental Congress at Washington Mrs. Edwin Clarke Gregory, of Salisbury, State Regent, Mrs. Joseph B. Tate, of Asheville, re gent of. the Edward Buncombe chap ter, and Mrs. Pohn T. Lowe, of Lex ington, were among the five D. A. R. Three genuine ? Orange Blossom Wedding Rings —Engagement Ring —Bride*s Wedding Ring — Groom’s Wedding Ring —in keeping with the growing vogue which decrees that these three rings should har monize in decoration. 22-22*1 ©Genuine Orange Blossom Rings beat this mark and the words “ Orangt Blossom ’% Note genuine without them y • • STARNES-MILLER PARKER CO. \ READ it f 111 , Then come and buy or phone No. v^\p^© o Goodyear Built Pathfinder Tires 30x3 Fabric 0C C £ Only * —*- <DD.UD ' Wx3,/! o“~. $6.65 30x3*4 Cord 07 CC Only - -3) t .03 J 29x4-440 Cord 0Q Afi 1 Only 3)0 .VD All Fresh New Stock Get Yours Before the Price Advances m ■wA Genuine Goodyear Blow Out Shoes , ~ , A Great Big Can of Goodyear • 20c AND 25c 25c Y orke&W ads worth Go.l _ | The Old Reliable Hardware Store '1 / ’ ■ ' j . ' zM , I. j. , -i up ..I i ? .I. , members to receive American Crosses of Honor for their living flag work. Patriotic service medals were giv en to Mrs. Frank Brandon Smith, of Charlotte, State Chairman of the cor rect use of the FJhig; Mrs. Benjamin Wyche, of Charlotte; Mrs. R. E. Ridenhour, of Concord; Mrs'. John Gorman, of Salisbury; Mrs. W. H. Cobb, of Goldsboro; Mrs. R. H. Whitehead, of Burlington; Mrs. George Bisanar, of Hickory; Mrs. E. B. Camp, of Waynesvile; Mr?. Edith C. Conway, of Statesville; and Mrs. K. L. Smith, of Greenville. All of these are D. A. R! mebers and almost all are chapter regents. The first American flag is thought to have been made at 239 Arch street, Philadelphia, by Betsy Ross, upon the order and suggestion of George Wash ington, commander-iu-ehief of the American army during the Revolu tion. The flag was adopted on June' 14, 1777, by Congress. This first flag had a star aiffl a stripe for each state, thirteen in-all. It was first used on August 3, 1777., at Fort Stanwix, X. Y., and was first under fire a few days later in the battle of Oriskauy. Its first battle, was at Braudywine, September 11, 1777. •; The first foreign territory over, which it waved was Nassau, of the * ~—- — : — : r fir JCPenneyCo. “where saving* an greatest’ * 50-54 S, Union Street. Concord. N. C. [2s* Anniversary t Women’s Hosiery Needs Our Own Numbers Take v Care of Them Inexpensively , J ; u * *» No. 1215 A number Tor Service and oat standing hosiery Value! This fiber hose is the berft that can be found i for the _ money, i pair, only ... .4tc No. 445 This full fashioned hose is woven of silk with • thread of rayon for longer wear. Unusually good looking at this low price. Pair .. 98c s Bahama Islands, on Jatiuary 2 s, < 1778, Nassau being captured by the • » Vmerieaus. Qn February 13, 1778, it received jts first foreign salute • rom the Freuch on Quiheron Bay. I When Vermont and Kentucky were admitted as states in the Union in II 1794, the number of stars pn the flag was raised to fifteen and the number ■ )f stripes was raised to fifteen. n But, •' is additional states joined the Union, it became evident that the 1 vould become too numerous.! In 'lBlB, Congress passed a law that the number L of stripes be limited to thirteen; rep •eseuting the thirteen original cot uiies. A star is -added for ea<;h' new state. There are now 48 stars. Oiyr ,j lag today ranks as the third oldest latioiml standard of the world. , . Visitors to Be Honored This Evening. Prior to the dance being given tbje evening by Misses Auue Mary { Cannon, Mrs. Mattie Lee Cannon wiH give a formal dinner at the Hotel Con cord honoring Misses Marie Ander son, Ray Anderson and Barbara New ell, who are the house ghetetsL of tire Misses Cannon, and Mildred Hudgins, of Marion, guest of .Mrs, J, A. Cannon. The invitation list include* ground thirty-five guests. • f I I ' PAGE FIVE No. 449 j Hundredf'bf: women select this hose for a 11- around good loopr and satisfaction. Full- fashioned pure silk with a. narrow mercerized j a top. Pair .. 41*49 < ' No. 45S A lovely sheer) chiffon hose—pure silk to the toyL This number i* sold only in J* C. Penney Company Stores at this low price. Pair . .$149
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
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June 13, 1927, edition 1
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