PAGE EIGHT I- IB: CHEAPER HEAT I . better heat j ■ 'jyii HEALTHIER HEAT EtfU ||, | :|p QUAKERS ARE FUEL 'MjTm /L'IJIIL WITH the fuel irrtSPi BURN IN ONE 0 | K"iw OPEN GRATE YOU I ! IS CAN HEAT two to three rooms The Quaker Furrtaee Is All Steel. No cemented joints to leak |.j smoke and gas In your home.. Easily installed in old or new homes. No H cutting of walls. One Register heats two to ten rooms. Sold on a writ |”i ten guarantee. No heat, no pay. Try it before you buy it. H We have sold over fifty of these furnaces in Concord and Cabarrus H county, and will gladly furnish the names of customers who have used {j these furnaces for several winters, and find them perfectly satisfactory. | H Phone 347 for Prices and Terms. .The Qiuiker burns any kind of fuck ' | Concord Furniture Co.| The Reliable Furniture Store _______ ion ''\\i r'^ : 3 to iii.- to his .t"! v -'k - - ! 13MBjjaMri | dresser takes that his RMHMi ißßrl clot lies i>. iini.i l,i' .ini i-a.-ter. Vv l-' v ' ffflWnPll' - Plain lines an- lie- ueeepted V\ ) i ■Bilffil; .alls for expert tailoring to 1\ \\ HtMfflltti'll r‘K eff.s-l. You'll I \ \ HH| see it ex pressed in milißißPwfti ' wijllKffi’ l ''' l\ii|)|)eiilteiinei il| ;; Copyright 1923, The House of Kuppenhcimer W. A. Overcash Clothier and Furnisher Ki —MMM—HHMBPggililEglt-?-“f:»f'4f-"-ss V IN I 111 1111 ■—W LISTEN, MR. PRODUCER! jj If you are looking for a place to market your products, you will | lose money by not seeing us. J We are the largest produce dealers in the city. f / We cannot handle all your products but we never get overstocked 3 on .chickens, eggs, butter and cream. « We are paying 43 cents per pound this week for butter fat ; 10c * per pound for hens, 20c per pound for young chickens ami 37 l-2e per l dozen for eggs. C. H. BARRIER & CO. Kit ■ ■ -v ■ ■ sj . ■ , , - . - ... ~ ?-r-i--v; : - c—s-- ; trggyg—■, i, s a.„i ....,,, PUT I BLUES! BLUES! BLUES! 8045 —Last Go Round Blues Sara Martin ] Mama’s Got the Blues Sara Martin | 8060—Church Street Sobbin - Blues Eva Taylor From Now on Blues Eva Taylor ] 8059 —Beale Street Blues Esther -Bigeon | .Toe Turner Blues Sara Martin 8071—Triflin Blues Lueile Bogan j Chirpin’ the Blues Lueile Bogan i 8068—You'll Have No Luck By Quitting M' Eva Taylor 1 I’m Gonna See You Eva Taylor ] 8010—Sweet Daddy Daisy Martin i Honolulu Lou .. Daisy Martin 1 8061—It Takes a Long Time to Get ’Em Sara Martin ] Come Home Papa Blues Sara Martin i 8067 —-Yodeling Blues Eva Taylor and Sara Martin j Monkey Man Blues Sara Martin and Eva Taylor , 8070—Midnight Bines ... Alice Carter I If You Want to Keep Your Daddy Home ........ Aliee Carter ! Old King Tut Sophie Tucker | 1839- —Papa Better Watch Your Step Sophie Tucker i If You Don’t Like It Leave It Sara Martin ! 8078—Nobody in Town Can Bake a Jelly ltoll Like Min . ■ Sara Martin i 8065—The Hesitating Blues Esther Bigeon <| Yeavg My Sweet Dadtly Alone ;. Esther Bigeon ]1 BELL & HARRIS Music Department OOOOOOdOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOC JM——nWTT 1 1-- - - -|-| I ■ l_ ILIB.LJ .1 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC I Go To East Corbin Street Gin FORTY TO FIFTY BALES PER DAY is our ginning capacity. That means that you don’t have to spend a whole day to get a hale of eotton ginned. If wgrxan’t satisfy you. yon can’t be satisfied. We buy your ’seed at highest dKMrket price and give ginners weight which means that you sell us the dirt in your qqton. J, B. Linker Ginning Company KEEP US BUSY PHONE 44SR Trade With Merchants Who Advertise . Mil ■ h" ■' ' • THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE " The Concord Daily Tribune TIME OF CLOSING OF MAILS? The time of the closing of malls at j ! the Concord postoffic-3 la as follows: j Northbound. I Train No. 136—11 p. m. 1 Train No, 34—4:00 p. m. Train No. 36—10:30 a. m. Train No. 12—6:30 p. m. 1 1 Train No. 38—9 :0U p. m. - ! Train No. 30—11 p. m. Southbound. - i Train No. 37 —9:30 a. m. - j Train No. 45—4:00 p. m. Train No. 13o—9:00 p. m. Train No 29—11:00 p.m. •; 1 | WEATHER FORECAST. ■ Partly cloudy and cooler ttonigfft : probably shower:, on the coast; Satur day fair, cooler in the east. ' | LOCAL MENTION Born to Mr. and Mrs. William Blaek welder. ou September 19th. a son, Wil liam. Jr. i f“ No new eases of contagious diseases 1 I” were reported Thursday to the office of j: the County Health Department. ■ , Mrs. E. F. Blaekweider, of the Ma- ! I" sonic Home at Greensboro, is visiting at fij,, the home of Mrs. 1,. I*. Davis, on Corbin |li street. , |- I The girls' missionary guild of Trinity •* ltefonned Chnreh will meet in the church! this evening at 7 :30 o’clock. Miss' Ev elyn Goodman will be the leader. Ice cream, cake ami sandwiehes will * be sold by the Mission Hand of Trinity 3 Reformed chnreh on the ehttrch lawn ’ Saturday afternoon and evening. ‘j j ’tin* condition of Mrs. W. F. Goodman. 2 who lias been confined to Iter home for * several days on neeount of illness, is re- I] portetl its intteh im|irovetl today. ' Mrs. Arthur G. Odell was hostess on i Wednesday evening at a dinner, compli- . § ineutary to Mrs. Fred Odell and Mrs. 1 j l’liil Carlton, who are visiting in Con jj rul'd. s Mr. and Mrs. |). A. MeLauriti and i son. Eugene, have returned from Wil ■ tnington and Wrightsville Beach, where ; j they spent several 'days, making the trip a by automobile. 8 All persons who intend to take part ; in tlie mitsieule to he given later under J the attspiees of the War Mothers are S asked to be present for the rehearsal to| he held .-it the Y. M. C. A. this evening: : at .8 o’eloek. " The Ilartsell Mill School will open | ; on Monday tuoriiing. with Mr. B. 1“. 8 OslKtrne as prineipttl. Mr. Osborne Inis' s been principal <>f the Howells school for J the past two years. The remaintler of J 8 the teaching force will remain unchanged, i Miss Louise Morrison will entertain tit ’ bridge on Saturday afternoon at 3:30 8 o'clock complimentary to Miss Penelope | Cannon, who will leave early next week | to enter Fasifern school. The affair t will he a farewell party for Miss Can | non. " The members of the football team of J the Concord High School left last night 1 for Greensboro, where they play the first m game of the season today. The team was given a tine send-off h.v a large number ■ of students and every member of the ‘ team was confident of victory. Today a I number of Concord people drove to I Greensboro to see the game. The Cabarrus Cotton Mill of Kannapo lis is having a number of new dwellings erected now in South Kannapolis. This I company recently installetj additional ma il ehinery and the houses are being erect ' ed to house new employes which are expected to be engaged iu the near fu ■ sure. South Kannapolis is growing rap " idly now ami will soon almost be a city 5 within itself. :: Danville won ’the pennant in the Pied- i j mont League, defeating Greensboro in » four straight games. In the seeries be _ tween tlie Charlotte and Wilson teams. ® Charlotte now Has the edge, winning the “ third game Thursday by a score of 13 r to 7. Quite a number of Concord people l went over to Charlotte for the game, l| and another large crowd went over this l afternoon for the second game. l Concord hoys at tlie State University have written home that the crowd at the Hill this year is the the history of the school. “There are more boys here than I have ever seen,’’ one young man wrote, “and I understand hundreds of others were unable to get I places to stay.” All of the dormitories l of the school are filled, he wrote, and j, many private homes in the city are hous- I ing a number of the students. II Mooresville Enterprise: The editor of l The Enterprise received a call Tuesday j from Mr. William Elkins, of Texas, a former citizen of Cabarrus county, who , has lived in Texas many years. Mr. El kins knew many people at Concord fifty I years ago. He is visiting relatives and j friends in this and adjoining counties. having been in the Old North State since May. He will return to Texas in Oc i tober. ! At Tlie Theatre^ II "One Night in Paris” and a Monty j Banks comedy entitled “Hangin’ Around” i 1 are on the program today at the Star ij theatre. ! 'William Fairbanks is on the program 5 today at the Piedmont theatre in “The Law Rustlers.” and also a Mermaid com edy “Poor Boy.” J The Pastime today is showing Pete Morrison in ‘Strike of the Rattler.” and a Century Comedy, “Dad's "Boy.” VMerail’s Body is Sent Home C. O. D. Wilmington, Sept- 20.—Arriving here today in the baggage car of an express train with a C. (). D. card nttnehed calling for the amount of? 246. the liody of E. Ij. Vause, seaman, who recently died in a veterans' hospital in Palo Alto, Calif., returned to its native heath with no one to meet it or able to claim it. The destination of the body was Freeman, where the aged father of the deceased was awaiting the arrival- The aituation here was quickly met, bow- S ever, when J. L. Sprunt, vice-oommand- Bj er of the local legion [tost guaranteed | the charges with the aid of the look! * legion men. A sharp protest will Be'- ? registered with the veterans' bureau at Washington, officials announced, over ■ „ the manner employed to send the body hom ‘‘- • . , COLORED WOMAN DIES AS ' i RESULT OF GUNSHOT WOUNDS Hattie McClure of Franklin .Mill Section .. Said to Have Been Shot by Caleb Ar j chibald.—Man Still at Large. I Hattie McClure, colored woman who, lived near the Franklin Mill, died last | j uight at the Concord Hospital, where I she was taken for treatment, and Caleb j • Archibald, negro, is being hunted by of- Icers. charged with having shot her tol -death. ’ j The tragedy, which occurred on % Wed- uesday evening at the home of the dead | woman, follow ing an altercation, it is said. Archibald, who lives near White ' Hall, went to the woman's home, and as- | ter some words, opened fire on her with] | a shot gun. emptying the load of shot 1 into the lower limbs of the women. It was said at the undertaking parlors that ] death came as a result of the loss of blood, the arteries in the lower limbs 1 having been severed by the load of shot. ! Immediately after the shooting, Archi bald fled, anil has not yet been appre ! bended. | The dead woman, who had a good rep utation, was tlie mother of thirteen chil dren. 1 ____________________ i ■! : K. OF P. NOTICE I Regular meeting Concord Lodge No. | I 51 K. of P. Friday evening at 8 o'clock. Work iu second rank. R. E. UIDENHOUR, Jr., C. C. | I rrsx-CEEI.T ::x rrrrrrrrrrr^r^^ Scarboro’s NEW DRY GOODS STORE | Special Sale For Friday and Saturday I :;•] Special Values in Every Department I -Hi Silk Step-in. Colors Flesh and Peach d*T qq H Priced v 1.90 rt Silk Knickers. Colors Pink « d* |QQ Priced $1,170 |; t j Crepe de Chine Silk Teddies. Colors’: Orchid QC I and Pink |- |] Misses' C'.ood Quality Round Ticket Hose, size 0(f I 6 1-5 to 10 per pair |„ •j Ladies' Silk Hose in most all colors: Otter, QQ • Cordovan,* Black. Beige, Special Value J/OC l» )!' < )ne Lot Fine Gordon Silk Hose. Colors: Cas- d*l AQ ! !;:{ tor. Beige, Otter, Black and Cordovan $ 1 One Lot Nainsook Teddies ! Priced ?_ i>57C r • t On© Lot Nainsook and Long CLoth 75c and 98c B | Scarboro’s THE STORE OF DEPENDABLE VALUES ' P Located Next to Gibson Drug Store jr X)o^ 1 of the Food Value of Your Wakings Plain flour has a large amount of food value but it must be combined with good baking powder in order to retain this value. Most self rising flours are not successful because they do not and cannot raise*he bakings to the proper lightness. This means a certain loss of nutri tion because they are heavy and hard to digest. Every time you eat food that does not properly digest you do not get the full nutritional . value —you are over-taxing your stomach. Nourishing and perfect bakings are what good health demands. The one sure way is—use pure flour and good baking powder. If you want to find what thou sands of housewives have learned make some biscuits with self-rising flour then make some with good plain flour and Calumet Baking Pow der-notice thegreat difference. One trial will satisfy you. Your health demands that you make the experiment. Those who know—millions of housewives, domestic science teachers,bighotels,restaurants, bakeries and railroads will not use anything but Calumet, ,the Economy Baking Powder. \ Play safe—use Calumet and plain flour. It is the most eco nomical and satisfactory, where light, wholesome and pure foods are desired. PACKED. IN TIN —KEEPS STRENGTH IN ' Have You Learned jthe most Reasonable | | Place to get the Best ■Home Cooked Food jin this City? Our Customers say it is the IDEAL LUNCH ROOM Barbrick Street “Ask Anybody” j CONCORD COTTON MARKET. ! | FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21. 1823. ■ Cotton 20 j New Cotton 27 Land Deeds and Mortgage Trust Deeds. | 5 cents each, at Times and Tribune I Office. | OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOUOCJUOOfXJMOOUUOOJOOOOOOOOaOOOOOCMTOQri I Make your wants known and we can supply you jjl with one of the newest styles and shapes of best ?! and most used materials. SPECIALTY HAT SHOP j OOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO j COAL | A splendid lump coal for $9.50 per ton. 5 Best Jellico double screened SIO.OO per ton. | I The above prices for immediate delivery, i I I will thank you for your order. I sell for cash. 1 A. B, POUNDS Phone 244 I “Quality Store” I • | Give us your order for Fresh Country Butter and ! ; Eggs and Farm Vegetables. ij i : i j Orchard Produce Company | - Phone 130. Successor to L. E. Roger i goooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo If you want that genuine feeling of j j satisfaction invite us to your next j ; blowout. We live up to our guarantee of ab- § I solute satisfaction in all our vulcaniz- | I in g- . w I | Motor & Tire Service Co. J ioooooooooo«MOOonooononoonnivgvyy«vvy»«y»«yyy»^y^ 0 ♦ ; V ; v ;» We have a beautiful line of Football Goods. All guar anteed: FootbalbShoes, Jerseys, Stockings, Helmets, Shoulder, •Knee, Elbow and Kidney Pads. Official Footballs—Winchester and D. & M. Boys’ Winchester Special Footballs, regulation size $l.OfV * ; R itchie Hardware Co YOUR HARDWARE STORE | WE SPECIALIZE ON BUILDERS HARDWARE | CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected Weekly by Cline t Moose.) Figures named represent priced paid for produce on the market: Eggs 40 | Butter .' .80 i Country Ham 25 to .30 Co*try Shoulder 15 ! Country Sides 15 i Young Chickens 32 1 Hens .18 Turkeys 25 to .30 Uard 12 1-2 Sweet Potatoes $1.25 Irish potatoes $1.25 Onions $1.25 Teas $1.75 Corn > $1.15 Land. Deeds and Mortgage trust I>ee