Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Sept. 13, 1923, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Concord Daily Tribune (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 TWO PENNYCOLUMN If You Want an Ideal Home in Concord, ' see J. A. Furr, Route 1. Kannapolis*. 13-3 t-p. Wanted— Two Fresh Jersey Milk Cows. J. C. Misenheimer, Route 3, Concord. 10-6 t-p. Wanted—You t» |Buy Singer Sewing machine. Five dollars to start, and 10 cents a day will pay for machine. . KM5t-p. / If You Want a Level Farm That Will produce, at a bargain, see J. A. Furr, "Route 1. Kannaisolis. 13-3 t-p. Why Take Chances on Just Milk? When you can get Pasteurized Milk tor the same price from the Co-operative Dai ry Co. Phone 292. IH-it-p. Learn Barbering; Big Wages, Jobs Guar anteed. Write for catalog. Richmond Barber College, 002 East Marshall St., Richmond, Va. 8-7 t-p, For Rent—Seven-Room House, Modern conveniences. Corner Franklin Ave nue and Beech Street. Phone 512 W. Mrs. Scott Frieze. 11 -tit-c. Kent a New Ford. Drive It Yourself. J. D. Boyd, residence phone 143 L. Letter- Motor Company. Phone 50K. 11-(It-p. J. A. Furr Offers 94 Acres of Good Fer 'tile land, one-third in timber, plenty of water, no waste land on the place, right near the National Highway. I One of the best high schools and < churches in the state. Midway be- j tween Concord and Kannapolis on a| direct line. Good two-story house I and out buildings. The rents pay more j than 6 per cent. A bargain sure! enough at $(>,500.00. 13-3 t-p. i lYc Have Completed the Erection Our | new cotton gin machinery and are j ready to gin. Try us. J. B. Linker & j Co. 1.3-,lt-chg. Wanted—Rooms For Light Hcu&ckeep- I j iug. Call 639. •13-3t-‘p. I If You Want the Best Farm in the j county for trucking and dairying, near j Kannapolis, see .1. A. Furr. Route 1. Kannapolis. 13-3 t-p. j Free Battery Water to- All. Drive; around. Southern Motor Service Co. i Phone 802. 13-3 t-e. j Will You Need Tires Soon? If So Try j the best, tlie Goodyear, Southern Mo- I tor Service Co, 13-St-c. | I New Seeds of all Kinds t"i In buying Field Seeds we use every precaution to got the BEST H . ?«| quality that the market affords, when you favor us with your seed bus jjjf iness you can be assured that the qUtility is the very BEST. We have full supplies of New Crimson Clover Fauey Red Clover H Winter or Hairy Vetch • {"j Orchard Grass I-j Bed Top r| Bed Rust Proof and Fulguui Oats. H If you are interested in any kind of SEEDS please give us a Iff chance to show you our Hue. |"f | RJCHMOND-FLOWE COMPANY H SCHOOL SHOES! Our line of Sturdy Built Shoes for School Wear is complete. Save Money by Buying Them From Us. PARKER’S SHOE STORE Between Parks-Belk and McLellan 5c and 10c Store Notice to All Auto Owners Have‘you had the battery in your car looked after lately? This should be done at least twice a month, and probably yours as well as many others has not been tested and .water put in the min several months. We now have with us an expert battery man and he will be glad to test your battery any time and as often as you like regardless of the make. Drive around. - Southern Motor Service Co. PHONE 802 PHONE 802 ■feiL' • '.w.. ■. f •--4/"'' •* / .;■'■■■• •- X Quint Smith Building [ Goodyear Tires Accessbries Willard Battery ;t . . If You Want the Best Watered Farm in the State, that excels in growing wat ermelons, see .1. A. Furr, Route 1. Kannapolis. 13-3 t-p. j For Sale—Ford Speedster. Bucket Seats andever.vthing. It's the cat's whiskers, boys. Apply Cruikstank, Care Trib une. 12-ts. j Lest—Pair Tortoise Shell Glasses. Leave at Gibson Drug Store. Reasonable reward. 12-!lt-p. I Past tier izrd Milk —Delivered lee Cold delivered anywhere in city by Co-op erative Dairy Co. 1 'hone 292. 12-4 t-p. Another Shipment of Durants and Stars. We can make deliveries on the fol lowing models: Roadsters aud Touring Stars. Durants, all models. ,T. C. Blame's Garage. 8-6 t-c. Philadelphia Diamond Grid Batteries For Fords $17.85, and for other ears in proportion. Auto Supply & Repair Co. 11-3 t-e. If You Want ail Ideal Home on the Nat ional Highway, see J. A. Furr, Route 1, Kannapolis. 13-3 t-p. Man, Woman Wanted. Salary $75 Week ly full time, $1.50 ap hour spare time, selling guaranteed hosiery to wearer. Cottons.* heathers, silks. Guaranteed Mitts, Norristown, Pa. 4-12-p. J. D. Boyd’s l -Drive-It Station Located at the Letter Motor Ytompany, Phone 508.—Residence Phoue 143 L. 11- \ ; j Strayed or Stolen Sunday—Two Female beagle pups. Reward. C. Ed Cook. E. Depot Street. 12-4 t-p. For Rent—One Seven Room House. Wa ter and lights. ■ Apply Os. T. Rarn hardt. Phone 299 and 277. 11-2 t-p. Square Dance and Barbecue at Kindley’s Mitt Thursday Night, September 13. Music by Charlie Barringer, of Con cord. XO-3t-ehg. Have Your Battery Tested Here. It De . serves the best attention above the rest of the Mechanical parts of the car. Phone 802. Willard Cerviee, X3-3t-chg. Furnished Rooms For Rent. Phone 4981,, 309 South Union, Street. 12- Widespread Bed Plot Exposed (By the Associated Press.) New York, Sept. 12.—“ Through the encouragement of industrial .strike aud the breeding of distrust between employ ers and labor unions,” American ageuts of the Communist International at Mos cow have undertaken to gain control of labor unions as the first step toward rev olution and the establishment of a Communist regime on this continent, the United Mine Workers of America alleges in the second article of an ‘expose*’ of a widespread “Red** plot it claims to have uncovered. In carrying out this program the Com munists arc as much the foe of the trade unions as they are of the employers, say authors, of the miners' document. “There are persons who charge that the United Mine Workers in a ‘Red’ organization,*’ the document continues, “and that it works, sympathizes, eo-op ereates with, and is doniinnted by Com munists and Communist influences.*’ But the union “has no sympathy with the Communist movement in any of its phases. In fact. Communists recognize the miners* union as their strongest and bitterest enemey in America. That is why the Moscow masters put forth such a tremendous effort to cripple and seize the organization.** It is asserted that eight months be fore the general coall strike of *\pril 1. 1022, Gregory Zinovieve of Moscow, pre ident of the Communist International, began secretl\ instructing his American agents to foster and encourage the threatened breach between the operators and the mine workers, laying his plans with the strategy of a field marshal.” Meantime “coal operators had careful ly watched the trend of the open-ship campaign apd it had been apparent for some time that as soon as this movement was sufficiently entrenched in industry an effort would be made to cripple the miners* union in the hope that there might be a lower labor cost within the coal industry. Coal in the ground does not deteriorate and losses caused by a strike* can be added to the price of the <roal when it is finally mined. Conse quently, the coal operator has nothing to lose, and possibly. much to gain, when a strike is precipitated.*’ Fully*cognizant of the attitude of both sides in tin' impending strike, Zinoviev, it is charged, sent to his agents just prior to April 1. 11122, this communica tion : “The Central Executive Committee of the Communist Party of America must direct its particular attention ti* the progress of the miners’ strike iu America. Agitators and propagandists must bV sent to the strike regions. It is neces sary to rouse striking coal miners to the point of insurrection. Let them blow up and flood the shafts. Shower the strike regions with proclamations and appeals. This arouses the revolutionary spirit of the workers and prepares them for the coining revolution in America.*’ The mine workers’ chronicler contin ues : “In this troubled situation the Com munist group of America was to create a condition \vi*4ii,n die .-f<ike wifeh would eventually eliminate the officials of the miners’ union and enable the “Beds* to extend the strike into a great industrial upheaval, involving as they hoped, all labor unions and all indus try. * “Tints the United Mine Workers of America was attacked by an underground enemy at the same time it was engaged in a tremendous contest with the coal operators. It was a significant coinci dence that the two elements should at tack the miners* union at the same time.** When it appeared the strike would be siitlcd the Communists urged the min ers to refuse the terms obtained by their leaders and began to propagate distrust and suspicion of the union chiefs. Coal DON’T FORGET To Give That Boy or Girl going off to school a good BIBLE We have them in stock Oxford and Schofield From SI.OO to $12,500 They Are the Best Musette, h< New Shipment Football Shoes, Pants, Helmets, and Shoulder Pads. Also Silver King Golf Balls. Play the game with the best material and win. RESALE OF Y’ALUABLE CITY LOT. Whereas the congregation of the First. Presbyterian Church authorized the un dersigned trustees to sell the property de s#ibed below aud whereas said property was sold at Court House door in Con cord. N. C., on Monday, September 10. 1923, at 12 o'clock M., and whereas said bid has been increased 5 pfc cent., now therefore we will resell said property on Thursday. September 20, 1923, at 12 M. at the Court. House Door in Concord, N. C„ to the highest bidder for cash, said bidding to begin at $2310. Said property lies between the Blume Garage and Old Bresbyteriun Church property on South Spring Street and has a frontage of 28.1 feet and a depth of 202 feet. The sale will remain open 10 days for an increased bid of 5 per cent. E. C. BARNHABJDT, SR., 5. b. m<srrison, GEO. H. RICHSUCtED, N Trustees. Coneord, S\.C., Sept. 11, 1923. 11-3t-?bg. , THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE regions \\erc flooded with revolutionary documents most of which "originated at Cleveland, where the Communist or ganization had concentrated $1,100,000 sent into the country by Zinoviev and his associates.” "They (the Communists) did not want a settlement of the strike by orderly process," the I’nited Mine Workers de clare, 'TRiey wanted a potiti).HKpii'm and enlargement of it, with themselves in control, that would finally engulf the whole American industrial structure." In the Trade T'nion Educational League, founded in Chicago in October, 1921. witli money mid a program fur nished by Leuine, Zinoviev and I-esow sky of Moscow, the Communists sought a new method for "boring from within.”) The existing organizations had "failed! to bring about an uprising in conjunct tion with the steel strike in 1919 and the outlaw switchmen's strike of 1920” and "Samuel 1 lumpers, president *of the Am erican Federation of Labor had driven back the wave of Communism in the un ion." m 'William Z. Foster is alleged to have boeu designated to organize the league by its Moscow sponsors, and to have writ ten the "one big union*' plan shortly promulgated by the organization at Chi cago. Then 'the American Communists were ready for the 1922 strike. There follows in the miners' chronicle a long citation of names of alleged Cora ! muuist lenders and cities where they made headquarters as well ns coal reg ! ion towns where they were' most active. jData gathered by officials in raids on the headquarters of Fred Merrick at. Pitts . burgh are described in detail: C. E. Ilut ! lumber" was an charge of the Cleveland office. ' j | "Agents frfnn New York and ChicagaV ! as well as Cleveland poured into the coal I fields.” (hmtimies the miners' article, j "The New York headquarters was in the office of Carlo Trescn. anareho-eommun ist and political refuses* from Italy, who was sentenced to the penitentiary at At lanta for violation of war-time laws. Trescn was ‘field supervisor’ who exe cuted the 'boring from within' plans in the eastern district as they came to him ; from the Communist 'inner circle.’ The! Chicago headquarters was largely under! the direction of Jack Carney, editor of the Communist organ, "Voice of Labor”, Activities are reported to have been' concentrated iu t'niuntown. New Salem, Brownsville, Charleroi and Ave’.la, in the center of the Pennsylvania coke re-! gions. with a field stronghold at Bellaire, i Ohio. The American Civil Liberties I’nion. which during the coal strike' championed tiie causes of numerous pub-i lie speakers who fell into the hands of the authorities, was “concerfied primarily with keeping the Communist agents out of the jails and prisons of southwestern Pennsylvania nfter they were sent out by the revolutionary organization. j Dentist Cliargcd With Larceny. i Greensboro, X. C.. Sept. 19.—Dr. H.' D. Stembridge,-local dentist, is under bond for appearance in municipal court today on a charge of larcenv. He is' charged with stealing a watch. 'III i -'I, i „ ~ .| V ‘ 1 11 " ■him. STANDARD The "Balanced Gasoline Comincing proof: g In the face of th? fact that the motor -1 mg public is more particular today, more people this season are using "Standard,” the balanced gasoline, K Bp than ever before . "Standard” is meeting the demand ’ of a* large majority of motorists for an all-round superior performance in gasoline—for uniform quality and /jPBk that quality the finest wherever and . whenever they buy it. Stop at a "Standard” pump the next time—and every time. For complete jT* •' ) satisfaction. ‘ fliM r - STANDARD OIL COMPANY If- ffOfll (New Jersey) il: I -I Made in the \S if F i fr ■ gi* ILa/xI O S/ mi, TOILET ARTICLES Necessities at Great Saving in Price . Quantity Buying erf the Beik Stores enables us to sell the ‘ small articles for Less. List of prices on a few of the arti cles on Toilet Goods Counter: • FACE POWDERS LOTIONS, CREAMS AND LIQUID POWDERS Marvet Hubbard Ayers’ 75c , _ , . „ , r, . on Richard Hudnut s Orchard Beau- Azurea Face Powder 89c tv Liquid Face Pqwder. - Floraynie Face Powder 89c Hinds-Honey and Almond Cream Three Flowers 69c for __ 89c Mary Garden Face Powder 89c Cordons Cucumber Lotion __4Bc Coty’s Face Poolers 98c Pompeian “Cream 48c Edna Wallace Hoppers 48c, 98c Ponds Cold Cream 29c Woodbury's Face Powder . 29c u ar yGa r den Creams 43c Gardenia Face Powder 98c lhree Flowers Creams _— 48c SOAPS, ETC. TALCUM POWDERS ... , _ Woodbury s Soap _ Y 22c Mavis Talcum 19c Resiiiol Soap 25c '■* Mennen’s Talcum 23c Packer’s Tar Ssap ; 22c Colgate’s Talcum 15c MennenV Shaving and Colgates Florient Talcum S* 23c Cream! 35c Djer Kiss Talcum 25c Cuticura Soap 23c Three Flowers Talcum * 39c Pepsodent 'and Pebeco Tooth Selbros Fragrance Talcum 10c pasfe —39 c Colgates Small Tooth Paste _ 8c TOILET WATERS AND PER- Colgate’s Large Tooth Paste 22c FUMES * Full Line of Edna Wallace Hop pers Toilet Requisites in Stock. At Money Saving Prices Mum Deodorant 23c , Odorona 29c I hree Flowers Toilet Water $1.48 Three Flowers Travelettes _2sc Floraynie Toilet Water __ $1.39 t Richard Hudnut’s Toilet Water SPECIAL at 98c Beaded Draw String Bags just in Fiorayrhe Perfume $ 2.48 front our Parft office. Beautiful Jergens, Toilet Waters 68c colors in stvles for children and Mavis Toilet Water 95c ladies z z._ 48c and $1.48 PARKS ■ BELK CO. Concord . ' North Carolina Thursday, S.ept. J 3, 1923
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 13, 1923, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75