(Thursday; August 2, 1923. SOCIAL AND PERSONAL Mrs. Brown Entertains. Mrs. M. L. Brown was hostess at a I charming tea given yesterday afternoon at her home on South Union street in honor of three of her daughters, Mrs. Amos Davis, of Winnsboro, S. C., Mrs. Burks Withers, of Norfolk, Vu., and Mrs. Sterling Brown, of this city. 1 Tile lovely home of Mrs. Brown was artistically and beautifully decorated with cut flowers, different color schemes being used in the various rooms in which the guests were entertained. In the liv ing room yellot# predominated, and in the drawing room a color scheme of pink; and rose was carried out., In the dining room pink and lavendar were the pre- ; dominating colors, and silver candle-' sticks and baske.ts tilled with flowers add ed to the beauty of the room. Invited to receive und entertain the guests were: Mrs. C. W. Byrd, Mrs. G. B. Lewis, Mrs. W. SI. Sherrill, Mrs. Vic tbr A. Means, Mrs. J. I. Davis, Jr., Mrs. E. T. Cannon. Mrs. W. H. Wadsworth. Mrs. J. P. Cook, Mrs. .1., F. Cannon, Mrs. I). L. Host, Mrs. C. Bf. Wagoner, Mrs. A. G. Odell. Mrs. A. R. Howard. Mrs. Zeb Moore. Mrs. Cameron Macßae, Mrs. \lt. M. King. Mrs. H. G. Gibsoi£ Misses Adele and Mary Phifer Pemberton, Mrs. M. L. Cannon, Mrs. E. C. Barnlinrdt Jr., and Mrs. E. 11. Brown. The hours were from 5 to 6 o’clock and about 100 guests called. Attend Conference For Farm Women. ,At tile regular meting of the Cabarrus County Council in Mhst Wilson’s office last Saturday afternoon, Mrs. C v J. Gndmau and Mrs. I>. R. Mnbery were appointed delegates to the Farmers and Farm Women’s Convention at Raleigh Julj’ 31st. August Ist and 2nd. Mrs. Mabery spoke at the conference and told the women how she won first prize in the better kitchen campaign con ducted recently in this county. Born, a sou. to Mr. and Mrs. X. L. Williams, on Odell street on Wednesday. August Ist. 11)23. Spanish War Vets to Meet in Moores vllle Tuesday. Mooresville Enterprise. . Member of Company 1... First North Carolina Regimeut. wav with Spnln, l (jrganized into the Edward Hill . ('amp \of Concord, will meet at Stewart Park, this city; on nevt Tuesday. August 7th. There are many others who served in lie Spanish-Americuu war who are iiembers of this organization who will neet with Company Ij. and the "event is locked forward to ’with a great deal of interest. This will be the fifth annual reunion, the second having been held in this city three years ago. The veterans wiH meet at the park at 10 o’clock and after the roll call and preliminaries. GeoVge Morrow, a world war veteran, wi»4e»ve* JhrAddr f **.<'tfrtef prtjram committe will announce the .various features. A picnic dinner will be served by the wives of the veterans \ who live in Mooresville and vicinity. The boys are expected to come from ; California, Florida. Virginia, Massa chusetts, and other States, but the bulk of them reside in ltowiyi and Cabarrus l county, with a few shattered here and there throughout the South. Samuel A. Grier, of Barium, is secretary of the camp, and it 5s though probably as many us thirty of th original 104 men will be present after 23 years. These boys were among tire 125.000 Ameri cans who volunteered to go oil foreign sJ-to relieve an oppressed people aitd figit for democracy, Harry Deaton is Cafap Commander. To Hold Service at County Chain Gang Camp. Rev. C. A. Linn, pastor of Holy Trin ity Church in Mt. Pleasant, will conduct services at the County Chain Gatgr Camp next Sunday after noon at 4 o’clock. The camp is located in Xo. 11 township, about three miles from Concord, on the Monroe road. £ vent-siX thousand people cun stand r the roof of St. Paul’s Cathedral. 'J SORE MUSCLES ; ’ Vacations are often ( spoiled by soreness re- (| suiting from outdoor v games. A good massage with Vicks often gives 1 i surprising relief. . * w W W Vapoßub ! Over IT Million Jan Und Yearly - -- j . oj commoti* f k tenounedge- § i ww&lm J pms us°/or fjM w the pursuit ... P m v . I . W-.y »j PERSONALS. , Rev. M. L. Kester, Mrs. Kester and children, Mrs. 11. C. Little and daughter, Mrs. Summer, have returned from Wil mington and Wrightsville Beach, where they have been spending two weeks. * • * Miss Lenna Hartseli, a missionary stu dent of Asbury Collie, will conduct ser vices at Cold Springs Church next Sun day afternoon at 3 o’clock. • • • Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Fisher and chil dren, Beatrice and J. C., have returned from Wrightsville Beach, where they have been spending a few days. • 3 * Miss Jennie Bulla, of Sophia, X. C., is visiting her uncle, Mr. John Bulla, on North Union street. Mrs. D. G. Caldwell has returned from Raleigh, where she spent some time. m • • Miss Irene Long has returned to her home here from Lexington, where she visited her aunt, Mrs. C. E. McCrary. • ■ • Miss Margaret Winders, of Granite Quarry, is spending several days here, the guest of Miss Velma Lyles." • m a Mrs. Amos Davis and daughter, Fran ces, returned today to their home in Winnsboro, 8, C. They were accompan ied by Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Brown, who will return home tomorrow. ... Master Lloyd McKay is spending sev eral days at the home of Mr. X. M. Pe treu,- iu this county. •• • ' Rev. R. G. Hunter, of Louisville. Ky., spent Wednesday in Concord, the guest of Mi*. 'W. G. Caswell. • • • Mrs. W. G. Cilswell left Wednesday for Norcross, in the western part of the State, where she will spend some time. Miss Jessie Vturkhead lias gone to Norfolk to spend some time. « • m Mr. and Mrs. .T. L. Caunon and son, ,T. Lee, Jr., have returned from a stay of several days at Norfolk, having mnde the trip in tlieir car. Paderewski Once Ordered Out of Rus sia By Czar. Paris. Aug. I—lgnaucc .Tap Pader ewski. the- famous Polish pianist and comiKiser. received one of the heartiest welcomes accorded him since his re turn to the concert stage when he ap peared before a Paris audience recent ly. Thousands of people thronged to see him pass on his way to the theater, and he was again besieged when the con cert, a benefit affair, was concluded. The French press re-told at groat length the story of how the noted artist was expelled f*bm Russia j ears ago by Emperor Alexander 111, after Ptiftprewsrtcr Bart •[fliryeiU'lMorJ the.cWlt. ctou nre a groat artist, and an honor to Russia,” the emperor is re ported to have said. “Pardon. your majesty,” replied Paderewski. “To Poland.” The next day the pianist received an order to leave Russia, and he had- never returned s since. The newspapers here also mentioned the fact that on the day of his first concert. Paderewski drove to the thea ter box -office and purchased nearly a hundred seats at regular prices, which he, distributed among his friends. His only request to the' management was that he be given a dressing room, so that he could let his hands soak iu very hot water for half an hour befor> the concert. He explained that lie had found this the best way to make tliem supple. Items ‘From the Mooresville Enterprise. Miss Mary McKinley, of Concord, was the week-end guest of Mrs. A. E. Brown. Miss Mhry Morgan, of Concord, has returned to her. home after a visit, at the home of her brother, Mr. C. S. Morgan on main street. Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Pressly left Tuesday morning for Montreat, where they will be quartered for several weeks at the PreSßly cottage. Mr. Pressly . may return the last of next week. Mr. and Mrs. John Earnhardt and family of Coodle Creek, have just re turned from a trip to Chimney Hock, Hendersonville, Asheville, Junaluska. and Black Mountain. They report ;i wonderful trip. Mr. 8. 8. Denny is firmly set in the belief that the boll weevil is nothing more than the ehinquepin weevi’. He says that many v vears ago this entire , section was covered with ehinquepin bushes and the crops were at times epormous, but the weevit lias destroyed practically all ehinquipins iu this sec tion and are now going after the cot ton. Deep in the shaft of a coal mine near Duqouin. 111., a service of prayer is held each morning before the miners begin their work. ■■■■ CHICKEN FEED. COW FEED. HOG FEED. We Buy Feed in Big Car Loads, Cheap For Cash. We .sell you solid worth, 'no fancy bags qr costly name, but Dependable Feeds Cheap, . Purity Good Scratch Feed, 100 pounds for i, JLTS Garno Hen Feed, made of wheat, sun flower seed, buckwheat,- cracked corn, cuffr corn, barley, oats, etc. No trash. ll)0_!bs. - sa.w Pure Wheat Bran. 100 lbs. $3.25 1(U per cent. Pure Wheat Middlings, 400 pounds $3.40 28 per cent. Highest Grade Dairy Feed, far j. s«.o© Cotton Seed Meal, Hulls, Hay, Straw, Shucks, efc. ■ Phone 330. We deliver everywhere. You can pay later. jpne & Moose FORMER JUDGE JONES SHOT BY F. C. TUTTLE Son-In-Law .Declares He Fired in Self- Defense. —Pistol Duel in Kitchen. Greensboro News. Former City Judge C. A. Jones was shot and dangerously wounded by F. Clyde Tuttle, his son-in-law, in a pis tol duel "in the kitchen of the Jones’ residence, 110 Pearson street, shortly after 7 o’clock last night. Judge Jones was taken to Wesley Ixjng hospital where surgeons pronounce his condition as vyry serious. An opera tion performed immediately after the shooting revealed that the intestines were perforated in seven places by the bullet. Surgeons say that while not necessarily critical, the wounded man’s condition is serious, the greatest dan ger being in the possible development of peritonitis. Tuttle was placed in the eountry jail about midnight and is held without bail pending the outcome of his father-in law’s injuries. - Judge Jones was shot through the right lower abdomen. Although he re mained on .his feet and walked several hundred feet to a molar car which car ried him to the hospital it is said that he was iu a greatly weakened condition from loss of blood when lie reached the operation table. The shooting occurred during an altercation between the two and . was the culmination of a long series of domestic difficulties, according to Mrs. Jopes, wife of the wounded man. Mr. .Tuttle t old a Daily News reporter that he Shot iu sellf-defense, declaring that Judge .Tones fifed one shot point blanklat him, missing and that he drew his torn and shot to frighten his fathcr- In-lqw to keep him from firing again- The shooting occurred in the kitchen, there being only o'ne eye witness, Mrs- Tuttle, Judge Jones’ daughter. She was in a hysterical condition last night and could give, no coherent account of the happening. , NEW ENOCH ARDEN CASE Lee Iloyle Returns After 27 Years to Find Her Married to Another Man and the Mother of a New Family. Ilickory, Aug. I.—Another experience stranger than that which befell him early Saturday morning when a three weeks old baby was left , on his front porch . cnine into the life William O. Hoyle, local automobile mechanic, today. His father. Leo Hoyle, after wandering around 27 ears, drove up in an automo bile with Pink Hoyle,- of Gastonia, and declared his identity to the son. ' Some 15 years ago, Mrs. Lee Hoyle J married, again and is now living with her husband, Rufus McMillan, three miles from Lenoir, in Caldwell county. This couple have five children, the oldest Being less than 15 and the youngest ’ about six. j , When Lee Hoyle disappeared 27 years ago liis wife, then living near Cagus mountain, in Burke county, was told by Lineberry Hoyle, bis uncle, that Lee had been killed by a runaway team at a lumber mill in Catawba county. The ] wife and toother accepted the story, as ’ loiter she married and reared five 1 other children besides the little boy and girl by her first marriage. William Hoyle is a good automobile mechanic iu Hickory. His only sister, Mrs. W. S. McKniglit. lives iu Danville, Va. 1 Lee Hoyle left this afternoon in an automobile for Danville to visit his daughter. He said he would return to Hickory next week and from there would go to\Greenville, S. C., to engage in the cotton business. He has been in Bir -1 mingham for the past six years, lie said. 1 Had Lee Hoyle, like Enoch Arden, found the facts in the situation in his ’ home, and silently departed, his story ■ might never have been written. But 1 he said he felt the urge to return home to see friends aud loved ones. He said ' he had written twice, but had received 1 no answer. William Hoyle, who is growing ac customed to strange events said this as . ternoon that the infant girl left at his . home was doing well and that iie and . liis wife, who have been married 12 years and are childless, are becoming more at s tached to her every day. , The Chinese are the world's greaest consumers of garlic as food. B—^illiiiiMMlßß— COOKS with the GAS TURNED OFF! HOW IT WORKS (1) AVITH DIRECT heat while the gas is on like any other gas range. (1) WITH RETAINED HEAT AFTER GAS IS turned off. Insulated oven and hood seal the heit for hours. How.lt Meets Your Problems (1) Every afternoon away (2) Time to entertain guests (3) No spoiled food when dinner late, j * (4) / Servant problem. How It Serves You (1.) Cuts, gas bills in half. (2) Cooks better food. ( (3) Saves time and labor; Why-You Should Own One / Not gives you a new freedom, but cuts gas bills and pays dividends. Let Us Demonstrate smi concord rami hoboni ROTARIANS GET SOLIDLY BEHIND CABARRUS FAIR Coming Fair atttj Music Feature Pro gram of Concord Rotarians at Regu lar Weekly Meeting. Music and the Cabarrus Fair were the chief features of the program at the , regular weekly meeting of the Concord , Rotary Club yesterday at the Y. M. C. a. : Major W. A. Foil, representing the Cabarrns Fair Association, made a brief talk in which he called attention to the exhibits building at the fair ground and pointed out the advantages of the building for advertising purposes. Itotaf ia ns promptly responded and representa tives of various lines of business con tracted for space in the building. Cotton manufacturers, present pagerly responded and a motion was made that , the president appoint a committee to j consult with the Cabarrus Cotton Manu facturers’ Association with a view to the association contracting for space suffi cient to give an exhibit by nil the mem bers. E. Sauvain, A. 11. Howard and A. R. Hoover were appointed. Allan Prindell, chairman of the music committee, which was in charge of the program, introduced Miss Helen Fisher and Mrs. 11. G. Black. Miss Fisher ren dered a vocal selection which was re ceived with marked approval. Mrs. Black, who lias favored the club with se lections at previous meetings, rendered several piano numbers, which again em phasize her splendid musical talents. Following the selections, Mr. Prindell made a brief talk on music and con cluded the program by leading the dub in a number of selections from the Ro tary song book. Mr. George Edwards, of Rocky Mount, was the guest of Rotarian C. B. Wag ner. t At The Theatres. Again today Norma Talmadge is be ing shown at the Pastime in the big fea ture, “The Eternal Flame.’’ At the Piedmont today “Fighting Blood” and "The Strangers” are being offered. Thu Star again today is offering Flor ence Vidor in the feature, “Alice Ad ams.” Southern Furniture Exposition. (By the Associated Press.) High Point. X. C„ Aug. I.—Seven hun dred and eighty furniture dealers from all parts of the United States attended the mid-summer show of the Southern Furniture Exposition which closed here last Saturday morning. This was about 300 greater than the attendance at any former show. July 1 ' . ...a i Clearance Sale i 1 j Continues | | Through Aug. 4th I VMM It Pays to Trade at ! pISHER’S Concord’s Foremost Specialists Honesty’s Reward. “Yessuli, I’s done proved dat honesty 1 is de best policy after all.” “How?” demanded his friend. “You remembers dat dawg I took?” “Shore, X remembers.” “Well, suh, X tries so two whole days to sell. dat dawg. and nobody offers more’n a dollah. So, like an honest man I goes to de Indy dat owned him an she give me $3.50.” The friends of the dead in China beg permission to burn qaint pasteboard images of men and cattle, shaped in cringled paper, on the spot where the dead lie. TJie ceremony is a mark of respect and is believed also to act as a sedative on the departed spirits. ,iiiiiiiiiiii[iiiiiiiniiiiiiiniliiiiiiiiii nfrUii' fbbiti hint, it <* Kanak prevents fishy butter—oniony milk KANAK (OH an the top ihelf of your ice box or refriger ator. That’s aIL Put anything in yon want. "Kanak’’ will gobble op all odors and gasesr—keep ing foods sweet and untainted. "KANAK" is bright metal R cannot rust—nothing to spill, tolly 4K inches high. No care or attention. Pot it in your Ice box fend forget it 'JftrwH by Good Kowthitpint Price SI.OO Pearl Drug Co. niuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiii You wouldn’t try to sing a quartet by yourself— Then why ask one suit to make the ’. i rounds of Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter? t. ! : .• 4 , What every man in Concord - 1 needs is at least one cool suit— a weight lighter than he wore in May. Look at Vacation time coming. Look at the Values that are here to-day. Look at how the girls are dressing and then let us introduce you to our dressing room. I Mohair, Palm Beach & Tropical Suits $15.00 up ' - ■ will wear this, next and all thru the summer of 1924 Browns - Cannon Co. I Suits tailored just a little better. Luggage too. ~ L — ' ■— I - M - - • PROMPT COMPLETE •** Building Material service right here at home. ' r | Ir itis worth r j - while to you to be able to get practically anything you may need in the building material line in one place and without delay. This is the service we render. ] YOU haven’t a ■ need in our lines too large or too small for us tq handle. 1 , ' ffflp_^ Ss *seievice\ < s r to'rv i:r.c.Nißix)C!Cl I 00000000000000000000000000cx300000cx>000000cx}000000000 > I New. Victor Records For August! ’ j j 66152 —Paddy Frances Alda 11 66151—Landler Mischa Elman ] | (56153—Serenade Eriki Moriui i i 66150—Spinning Song Paderewski 1 l 19028—Valse Hilda Clyde Doerr j | Savonla Clye Doerr i i 19072—Empire Message to Boys and Girlso of British Empire .. King George and Queen Mary ! , God Save ttie King and Home Sweet Home I Band of Coldstream Guards jij 19092 —When You Walked Out Someone Else Walked in .. .* Brooks Johns and Orchestra < i Bebe Brooks Johns and Orchestra ji| 19082—Medley of Old Time Songs The Troubadours ij i Victor Herbert Medley Waltz The Troubadours i,' 19091—Stella Great White Way Orchestra ]i| Carolina Mammy Great White Way Orchestra i[ i 19090 —Kosentine and You Zez Confrey and Orchestra ■' 1 Oh, Harold Zez Confrey and Orchestra ] I j 19002—Barney Google rV Great White Way Orchestra {[ i I Cried For You The Collegians j| j 10041—Wet Yo' Thumb Zez Confrey and Orchestra ] I [ Trot Along Benson Orchestra of Chicago ij i 19080—Just an Old Dove Song ....... John Steel ij When the Gold Turns to Gray John Steele ( , BELL & HARRIS Music Department j |!j] Little Hoy Blue go to blowing your horn-! | 801 l weevils in the cotton and chinch bugs in. the corn, 1 \ 1 | Crops grown above ground are subject to the pest; > || Plant underground crops and let your horn rest. U * We have a nice lot of Peach Bloom Seed Irish Potatoes that we 14 are selling at only $1.75 per bushel, while they last. if Bring us your chickens, eggs, butter, cream and vegetables. J.i , We buy anything you raise provided you don’t raise too mued □ 1 “Cain.” , «/ aH. BARRIER & CO.\ >’ B PAGE FIVE