Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Oct. 8, 1923, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO PENNY COLUMN Fresh' Shelled Pecans, Walnuts and Al monds. Crystallized Cherries, pineap ple, lemon and orange peeling, seeded and seedless lSmins—everything for the fruit cake. Dove-Bost Co. S-2t-p. Four-Burner “Kew Perfection” Oil Stove for sale. Phone 756AA’. 8-3 t-p. Lost—Automobile License No. lil(i7t on Kannapolis road. Return to J. C. Howard, 73 Ash sheet. Cmcm-d. and receive reward. • 8-£t-p. Wanted —Throe Salesmen Between 35 and 45 years of age. Good pay. Previous experience- not required. We 1 train you. AVUite Box 33. Kannap olis, N, C.' 5-st=p. [ Miss Ethel Griffin Public Stenographer and Notary Public, St. Cloud Hotel. 3-6 t-p.. Wanted—Men or AA'omen to Take Gri ders for genuine guaranteed hosiery for men, women, and children. Eliminates darning. Salary $75 a week full Vfime; $1.50 an hour spare time. Cot ton, heathers, silks. luteriiatiou.ll Stocking Mills, Norristown, Pa. 3-10tlp. Kcslakers Attention!—Send Best Kodak negative and 50 cents for sample Bxlo ■ enlargement. Oak Leaf Enlarging! Studio,,2o7 Vail St.. High, I’oinL N. Cj 3-St-p. I ii. , 1— i i All Wool Army New Socks 25c. Concord [ Army and Navy Store. 2-tit-p. • Beau Brutnmel Barrymore Deserts Broadway JOHU BARRTMORg. , J tk&Beaußmmmelbjfihe - - oq[e r hisdesatcdtußidsing Bmymorc pumped from Bmsto then tttioQyuxxd. to star m the jf toearverskm of the famous Sf \ play, "Beau Brumoel," at jm X * dnMr Ke n “^ os - v£STTON STOCKINGS GIVE EMPHASIS TO SIMPLICITY OF AUTUMN STYLES Wg £?3J§Bl6§ £z IHt UHfe IlK.} .. W.2P& 3U&v£!lmS&BgSß& W fm&i lAKC. i'M to.u’-io.. bk- ATTRACTIVE ? * CHICAGO—Summer girls have H Home trooping back to town from in knickers, one-piece S rocks, and gay sports skirts and louses,, put away their inf ormal, *asy, colorful clothes and donned Inn . , ■■_ ■'' itheir sombre-colored tailored suits. TRIML.Y MEOC&I2IZCD “Fashions show a sharp change now in the darker, richer colors for Hhis fall,” said a styles authority at wear with their serge gowns and the recent exhibition of the Fashion fall suits. It is as surprising a Art League. “It has been such a jump as that from bright colors to iriotous summer and' the tones of pastels. I had supposed the aver (the fall fashions are so very con- age fashionable woman was so Hervative and subdued. But one wedded to silk hose > she never -thing the summer girls will keep, would give them up for any reason, and that is the omnipresent cotton time, or occasion. (Stocking- “Four girls who had been away “I never would have believed a j together on a vacation came in to (year ago that women ever would show me how beautifully their 'ob ' (accept cotton stockings in the way | ton hose had worn and held their Hhey have. They like the feel of fit. Another girl defied me to tell them. They like the looks of them. \ whether the nude colored hose she And they nave made them smart, j were with her beaded beige fTock ffhey discovered that the knit-to-fit: and dull coppUr brocade slipper* %ose, shaped in the weaving, never | was silk or mercerised cotton. € flcee their trim contours, and after i thought they were silk. I w*S aeazing them all summer with ! wrong. They were merceriiod sal fnjM-sm* ituiw iVoy are haying £h-rq I had S IptMbr ibAHfc* All Persons Having Rooms Which They want to rent during Fair AVcek are asked to make the fact known to either Mrs. AA 7 . A. Foil or Mrs. M. L. Marsh. 8-Gt-e» For Rent—Case Building. Ideal Loca tion. G, 51. Beaver. H-6t-p. 1 Lost—Pair ladies' Shoes on Mt. Pleas ant road. Notify Martin Boss,' Route 5. 8-2 t-p. Wanted—Light Saw Mill Oil Ttraetorr Sunrise Farm. R. 3, Mt. Pleasant. 8-St-p. ! AVanted—To Trade Ford Ton Truck. I ginm] as new. for Ford car or light i truck. Adi.%;ys O, Care Tribune. 8-3 t-p. Wanted—Smpll Cottage or Rooms For family of four. Phone 99R. tv-2t-p. Big Bargains in Our Shoes Department. Concord Army and Navy Store. 2-6 t-p. Hames Os All Kinds at a Bargain. Con cord Army ami Navy Store. 2-Gt-p. Slip-over Sweaters S>sc. Concord Army ami Navy Store. 2-(!t-p. Land Deeds and .Mortgage Trust Deeds, ; 5 cents each, at Times and Tribune j Fl*'Sale—One Ford Coupe 1022 Mode* i One Ford touring car. 1921 model, i Both cars are in good shape. .T. C. * Biume’s Garage. l-6t-p. What {he World Is (Doing,} C4S SEEN BY <POPULAR cIMECHANICS Pound of Sugar Costs More Then Some Jewels Sugars that cost from STS to $375 per pound, because of the excessive care re quired to make them, are used in scien tific laboratories. One is useful in detect ing typhoid gern,s, an these tiny organisms multiply rapidly when feeding on it. A sugar, made from corn cobs, brings $l2O per pound, while another, manufactured from scraps left over in making vegetable buttons, sells for $l4O. * * * Sir Walter Raleigh’s First Pipe Shown in London Sir Walter Raleigh’s first pipe with which he is believed to have introduced tobacco smoking in England, has recently been found in London. Made by Ameri can Indians, and decorated with carved heads of people and animals, it is said that he smoked it on the eve of his cxocu Mr tioa. In the three centuries that have elapsed since, the spread of the habit has covered the civilized world. In the United States, a million and a half acres of land are given over to cultivation of many varieties of the plant, producing an annual yield far above a billibn pounds, with a value of over $250,000,000. Show Case Company hi New Home. I Statesville Daily. ( The Statesville Show Case Company i lias about completed the task of moving < its plant from the old Ramsey building I on East Broad Street to their new plant near the .1. C. Holmes Lumber Coin- i pany*s plant, jnst off West Front Street. < A representative of the Statesville Daily visited their new plant yesterday and * was courteously shown through the va rious department by Air. T. M. Crowell, the sole owner. Along with the eity**> distinction of { having* the h*?*i><miiri£Y in Um* ‘ world and .a tiftuplt* -of flour ‘ and feed mills in the south may be ad fled the distinction of having one of the largest and best equipped plants for J the manufacture of how cases and store fixtures south of the Masoit and Dixon 1 i ne. The Statesville Show Case Company ( was started in a very small way some t twenty years or more ago and was fin- [ ally moved to the Ramsey building on \ East Broad Strteet where it was con- ' ducted by Mr. .lames F. Ramsey for , several years and later by his brother, i Mr. Sherman Ramsey. The plant was 1 sold to its present owner, Mr. T. M. , <'rowel 1, about five years ago. Under the management of Mr. Crowell the busi ness has grown steadily and 1112 M found , the company very cramped in their old quarters. Their new plant is a modern factory biwlding of wood and steel construction with over 20,000 square feet of floor space. The building is modern, with hardwood floors throughout. The ina- j chine room, cabinet room and finishing room each occupy a department. * lllllllllllHlllllHlllillillllllllHlHlllllllllllllllHlllllWHHUlllllllllillllWlllHlillHllWllHllllltllllllllllllPimftlllllHntHWmMlllllHl T“1 f-l T-1 | FREE! j During the Month of October We Will Give Absolutely Free With Every Chambers Fireless Range Purchased ißTft " 3 a Humphrey Radiantfire as shown 1 RadSfe Cuts Gas Bills kt 1 ~ Cooks a roast / with twenty to I thirty minutes gas. 1 Ju iIwISHB $ Bakes bread with fifteen minutes I Boils three vegetables with ten | JHBBHMHm minutes gas. Come in and see the range that Avill pay you monthly dividends. ® * U Cooks With the Gas Turned Off i Ranges Sold on Easy Monthly Pay- x T I mentS. coon ■* A, usmnto orr) Concord & Kannapolis Gas Co. HIHmiHWHHIIIimHHIIHIIIIIIIIUIHItIIMBHimHtnnBHIIIIIIWIHIMWWIIIIBHBMimHUmiUIIHHIUIIIIHamiHHfIIIIHHUnI| THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Soviet Picture Cars Draw Interest of Peasants By winding trains of picture cars into the rural districts, the Russian govern ment is attempting to educate in the prin ciples of communism more than 100,- 000,006 people who, heretofore, have shown little or no interest in polities. Faulted on the akkeof the rafirond cars by the nation’s most skilled artists, are propaganda and edmrtioosl designs illus trating the enaanuttistie doctrines. In trying to “sell” this form of government to the peasants, the Soviets probably have become the world’s largest advertisers, • * • Fifteen Years Added To Span Os Life in Past Fifty Figures have been oompfled showing that the average length of life for in habitants of the United States has in creased almost 15 years in the past 53. In 1870, the average was 41 years, while now it is almost 56. By 1960, the span will have reached the biblical threescore and ten, provided the present high stand ards of civilization and correct living are maintained, a scientist has predicted. In the 16th century the ordinary term of life was between 18 and 20 years, and about ISOO, it was still less than 25 years. At the end of the 19th century, it ranged between 45 and 48 years. In addition to the main building. Mr. Crowell has erected a modern dry kiln that has a drying capacity that will take care of four carloads of lumber every two weeks, if necessary. (51r. Crowell is a former Concord 1 man. and a brother of Attorney .1. Lee , Crowell.—Editor.) G. C. Bergdoll Slay Come Home to | Enter Prison. s ; New A'ork. Oct. 7.—Grover (“eve land Bergdoll. fugitive from justice in Germany, intends-'*to rehitn to this country, and to serve his sentence for draft evasion. UiarnmtUer. Airs. Emma Bofgdo'l. (fr< ■1 a red *Cotl ay on her arrival from Germany where she visit.ed hei* son * His return, she said, would have to OOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO !j I SHOES | | That Are Comfortable.. Easy to Wear | j and Stylish. Our Prices Are Lower j PARKER’S SHOE STORE s Between Parks-Belk and -AlcLellan 5c and tOc Store J Poultry Feeder and Rat Trap A combination rat trap and dry-maah feeder is a rather novel addition to tiw poultry house. The feeder is * long box, 1 ft. high and 1 ft wide, wife a eloped and slatted top, through which the boas pnt their heads to eat during the day. To convert tine into a rat trap, a 4-in. hole was bored in the end of the hopper, a short length of 4-in. stovepipe fastened hi the hol% and a bag tied over the other and of the pipe and spread out oh the ground. A heavy board cover wee hinged to the feed box; tide was kept open by T — mr of a hook during the day, but the hook was 1 released, and a small prop with a string attached to it used at night. The string led away to a distant window so that the pnultryman could pull it without entering the poultry house and disturbing the rats. A yank at the string let the cover drop and trapped the rats inside. Then, by beating on the cover with £ stick, the rata wen made ti run through the bole, down the pipe, and into the bag, where a few blown killed them. As long as the hens ate from the feeder the rats never seemed auspicious. *• • • <J When examining the storage battery of a car to see if any water is needed, do not simply test one cell; examine them aiL One of the cells may be cracked, and will re quire water oftener than the other*. It is a good idea to examine a storage batte-y once every two weeks. In adding distilled water to the battery, always bring the level of the e}cctrolyL. V£in. above the top of the platen 1 '■ 1 :■ j i nwnit the of court i>rnr<‘Wl- i ings following the allrgod nttvmi.t ] recently to tridnmi him when one of thy men who tried to get Him out of tier- < many was kill ml and another wounded ] t>y bullets fired by Bergdoll. i j At the time of the attempted kidnap- 1 ing. Mrs. ltergdoll declared, her sop waif ' preparing to return toXthe jurisdiction i |of the Americaih courts. \ 'Pile attemiit she oharnotemed ns un- \ just and unfair persecution. Mis. Bergdoll said she would give* *| out a statement about her son's in- jl tentions when she returns to her home i in Philadelphia. Every thinking life creates its own , atmosphere, and is responsible for it influence. iartwT.-Ba.Bff.il; "I mi I ';r— ’ fj»pnnaaw>nßipa|Pßaaß«nnnHM»uuou^onnu|l>lpn«n»^iow Fall Clothes That Men Like High Qualityt Low Price MEN’S HAND TAILORED SUITS ! j Men’s and Young Men’s Hand Tailored Suits made of all ! Wool Blue Serge and Fancy Worsted. Suits made in all the leading models at $25, $29.50, $35, " d $39.50 MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S SUITS, $19.95 We are showing a great line of Men's and Young Men’s \ Suits, made of Serges, Cassimeres and Wors- (IQ QB ] J feds. Beautiful range of patterns at * jc SUITS AT $14.95 AND $16.95 > Just received a big shijfnent of Young Men’s Suits made in plain and sport models, all the latest patterns. Not a S Suit in this lot wiorth less than $25.00. Special ] c $14.95 $16.95 I NEW FELT HATS | Our stock of Felt Hats is ready in all the new shapes and jl colors. All standard makes at 91 $1.95, $2.95, $3.95, $4.95 “ d $6.95 MEN’S DRESS SHIRTS | 1 Men’s Fine Dress Shirts, made in all the new stripes and x checks. Made of best grade QO. tUt CO 1 CIO 8 t Percale and Madras at *OCj fldWt | MEN’S HOSIERY [ Men’s Cotton Sox Tft«> j All colors , .—J i Men’s Lisle Thread 25c and 30c 8 Men’s Silk Sox 4gc g5 C and 9 g c | ; MEN’S UNDERWEAR 0 ! Men’s Medium Weight Knit Union Suits — ; ,0 96c, $1.25 a " d $1.50 j Mt *L N^°* UWo " **• 43c, 63c, 98c i MEN’S SWEATERS J | Men's Sweaters made in Coat and Slipova styles. All the ' leading. co/lors— : $1.98 $2.48, $2.98„ $3.95, $4.95 MEN'S WORK AND DREgS PANTS, OT.W , Men's Dress and Work Pants, Big Range of Patterns from ] which to select. These pants are worth up to tO QB j $5.00. Special 1 [ • MEN’S $1.50 WORK PANTS 98c j One special lot Men’s Work Pants, regular QO. C $1.50 value. Special ■ 1 On the Boys'Balcony ROYS’ SCHOOL SUITS Boys' School Suits made of Fine Blue Serge, Fancy Wor- j! ' sted and Caslunere, some with two pair of pants at $3.95, $4.95, $6.95 “ d $9.95 BOYS'SCHOOL PANTS i Boys' School Paints made of Serge, Khaki and’ Corduroy. ! 1 AH sizes - ...... 9gc> I ’ BOYS’ MATS AND CARR ! Boys' Hats and. Caps. All mL A f Aft ft styles and'patterns .. ■, I BOYS’ SHIRTS AND BLOUBttB\ I Boys’ Shirts and Blouses made of best grade Percale and I Madras. Plain and Fancy Patterns -50 c 75c 85c *"* 98c | . BOYS’SCHOOL SWEATERS ft Bovs’ School Sweaters made in Coat and Slipova styles. B Colors: Brown, Navy. Marobn,. at I $1.50 $1.98 $2.96 $356 Parks-Belk Co. Monday, October 8, 1923
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Oct. 8, 1923, edition 1
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