Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Jan. 5, 1924, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAGE EIGHT 00000000000000000006060000000000000000000000000000000 I Removal Sale Continued On account of delay in completion of our new store, it will be i i February Ist bef6re we can move, and we have decided to continue our j J Kemoval Sale through January «r until we get moved. Everything re- | dnced 20 to 5 per cent. ♦ i i $187.50 Beautiful Cane Back Suite i ! $137.50 i i Cane backs and Cane Ends. These suites are large and roomy. Long J | settee. Large arm rocker and chair. Spring seats, loose cushions i i with springs in tlic cushions. Spring edge, soft and comfortable. Up- ] j holstered in good grade velour or tapestry, in blue, grey or brown, or , , combination colors. Two pillows and one roll with each suite. These i l suites are bargains at $157.50. Itemoval Xa’e Price only $137.30 ] j for the six pieces. i i Concord Furniture Co. jj THE RELIABLE FURNITURE STORE 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 j" A LADY ALONE AHK j is not only welcome but certain of ex » na attention in our establishment. , Whether she spends little or much makes /Sjhx no difference, but she may rely on get ting the best service, and the best food j|l(lmC that she could g»‘t for a greater outlay U JjPzgs&m | , U elsewhere. This is a well known fact. fjJgjfolmK carouwa case ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooQQooaoooooooooooooooooooi I NEW VICTOR RECORDS • ,19200 —Roamin' to Wyomin’ Whiteman and Orchestra i| That's My Baby Warning's Pennsylvanians ji 19177—Irish Melodies The Troubadours ( Songs of Yesterday Manhattan Merrymakers l 19207—There Are Some Things You Never Forget—lnternational Ndv- ] elty Orchestra i i Y'our Lips International Novelty Orchestra V 19210—Not Here. Not There Raymond and His Orchestra ]i Down on the Farm Manhattan Merrymakers iji 19100—Moorish March The Goldman Rami 1 Torchlight Donee The Goldman Rand ! 19206—Remembering ___ Duncan Sisters I Never Had a Mammy , _ Duncan Sisters 1 19208—Nearer and Dearer —. Helen Clark and Lewis James j Why Should I Give My Love to Y’ou Lewis James I 45373-—Colleen Avon - Richard Crooks | Irish Love Songs Richard Crooks ] 966—Cherry Ripe Fritz Kreisler I Emfraete 1 Fritz Kreisler ji BELL & HARRIS Music Department OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOCOOOOOOOOOOfWOOOOOOOOOOOOOooc goooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooc JANUARY 1„,924. The weather man calls for cold wave. Be on guard i and get alcohol in your 1 radiator before it freezes, jj Drive around and let us fill your tank with Texaco j 9 Gas, and your motor with oil. Auto Laundry is the best in town, just give us a Free air for your tires and water for your batteries SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS !| 1 CENTRAL FILLING STATION PHONE 700. , | s<v«OCXXX)OOOOOOOOOOOOOCXX)OOOOOOOOOOOQQQOnooOOIXKK>OOOOt Shock Absorbers —both 'I BE Yale Door Closer ab- or screen door*. ' **»« 4hock of Simple and compact in de- Pneumatic tire sign, the Yale Cloaer needs absorbs the road shocka for practically no attention once jpmmmmmmmm the automobile. installed. (Yv, J Tw%*iL° uld h#ve Yal « We will put one up for ifVyLmmam* Door Closers on your doors; you for thirty days’ free trial, entrance, pantry, bath room Write or phone toi RITCHIE HARDWARE CO £yALe3 tacks for Practteal PurpoW TOE CONCOkD DAILY TRIBUNE I The Goncord Daily Tribune i TIME~OFCLOSISG OF - MAILS J | The time of the dosing of mails at i the Concord pos(office is as follpws: Northbound. v i Train No. 136—11 p. m. • TrallFNo. 34—4:00 p. m. [ Train No. 36 —10:00 a. m. i Train No. 12—6:30 p. m. I Train No. 38—8:00 p. m. [ Train No. 30—11 p. m. Southbound. 1 Train No. 37—9:30 a. m ! Train No. 45—4:00 p. m. i Train No. 135—8:50 p. m. Train No. 29—11:00 p. m LOCAL MENTION ] * M:V H. T. Helms is confined to her home on account of illness. Cotton on the local market today is | quoted at 34 cents per i>ound: cotton seed at 66 cents per bushel. Mr. W. G. Caswell is unable to be at j 1 his place with the Cabarrus Savings ( [ Bank today on account of illness. Mr. John Grolf has purchased a block i of ten residence lots from Mr. Jos. F, 1 Cannon in the Wadsworth Addition. | i The Concord Ministerial Association | [ will meet Monday at 11 a. in. at t lie Y.: i M. C. A. All ministers are urged to bo 1 1 present, t One new case of chiekenpox. one of whooping cough and two of measles, were reported Friday to the County Health Department. Marriage license was issued yesterday by Register of Deeds Elliott to Mr. Reece Wallace, of Harrisburg, and Miss | Laura Joyner, of Hosts Mills. Dr. 11. A. Stirewalt, who has recent- j ly been elected as supply organist of St. James Lutheran congregation, will play nl both services tomorrow. A re]tort from the home of Mr. R. F. j Crooks today says that his condition is j unchanged. Mr. Crooks lias been very j sick for the past several days. The Kings Daughters will meet on j Monday night at the home of Mrs. J. | A. Cannon. The hour is 7 o'clock, and I all members are urged to be present. Mr. 15. 1.. T’mberger has been confined for the past week to his home at I.u berger Place on account of illness. 11 is condition is reported as about the sane 1 , j Jims Glennie May Searbtro. who has been making her home in Concord since j last September, left today to enter the j Eastern Carolina Teachers College at i Greenville. N. (Y Mr. C. A: Isenhottr is spending a few days in Winston-Salem, having been called there by the' critical illness of ' his little granddaughter, the one-year-old child of Mr. and Mrs. Luther Harkey. | The child is ill with bronchitis, bronchial j pemimonia and whooping cough. The circles of (lie Women's Mission- j ary Society of St. James Lutheran j Church will meet on Monday nr 3j o'clock at the following places; North, j | with Mrs. W. A. Foil; East, with Mrs. [ Jlio, A. Cline: South, with lie- R. V. j Rlackwolder: West, with Mrs. Fred It Shepherd. j A meeting of the War Mothers will j be held next Tuesday afternoon at o’clock, with Mr-. Frank Mills, on North \ Spring Street at 3 o'clock Mr. Blanks, i of the \\ M. C. A., will be present and | speak to the mothers on “Thrift Week,”, , and also on the Mother and Daughter) i banquet to be held soon at the Y. j Dividend cheeks are being mailed out now by the various business institutions in condition. The various banks aud mills are declaring their usual dividends in most cases. Among those reported were: Cabarrus Savings Rank 3 per cent, semi-annual: Citizens Rank and Trust Company. 3 per cent, semi-annual: Concord Ntionnl Bank 6 per cent, semi annual : Cannon Manufacturing Com pany 1 1-2 per cent, quarterly; Gibson Manufacturing Company 2 1-2 per cent, quarterly; Cabarrus Mills 2 1-2 per cent, quarterly. TODAY’S EVENTS Saturday, January 5. 1924. Forty years ago today 27 persons per ished in the burning of a convent at Belleville, 111. This is Twelfth-day Eve, a date much celebrated in England but little observed in America. A New England conference is to be held at Brookline. Mass., today to formu late a legislative program for the pro tection 'of birds. « Senator Borah, of Idaho, is to discuss the Mellon tax reduction plan and sol diers' bonus at a luncheon of the Na tional Republican Club in New York today. A nation-wide campaign to raise $lO,- 000.000 to complete the great national Episcopal cathedra] in Washington will be initiated today, when Bishop James E. Freeman begins a tour of the country in behalf of the project. Sunday, January Gth. Centenary of the birth of Thomas M. Cooley, famous Michigan jurist and law authority. Observance of the sixth anniversary of the death of Theodore Roosevelt. Rt. Rev. Lucieu L. Kinsolving. Epis copal bishop of Southern Brazil, cele brates hi ssilvcr Episcopal jubilee to day. , .nineteenth convention of the Zionist Organization in Canada is to begin its sessions today in Toronto. Today is Twelfth Day, or Twelfth Tido. in olden times regarded as the end of the Christmas holidays. According to those who profess to know, this is the 85th anniversary of the Night of the Big Wind” in Ireland. Historians. howeveT. have contended that it “Taint so.” 400 Houses Gone in Russian Quake. Moscow, Jan. 4.—Two villages com prising 400 houses were destroyed and 83 persons were killed in an earth qquake December 20, in Russia Turk estan, near the town of Ora Tyube, a dispatch received here today from I Taskent reported. The qua kg left big 1 fissures in the earth over a wide area and severed ail communications with the affected districts. The famuos Gobelins textile estab lishment in Paris has been producing . wonderful tapestries for nearly* 5(10 years. r fpi Tam Sims |>jfjSay» A woman who gave her husband bum cigars for Christmas tells us there are 711 new swear wwds. And a man who gave his girl a dia mond ling tells us three hours of hug ging is not enough. Kissing too long without looking up ■'g dangerous. It may make your nose grow crooked. Years ago, before so much rouge and powder, a man's suit didn’t need clean ing so often. You can take an old Christmas horn , and use it for a funnel, if you ever need j a funnel. j A thermometer can't read the weath er man's forecasts. j To remove randy from the mustache : inhale steaming soup until soft and comb 1 out < andy. ! Scrape the inside of a new pipe b?- j fore making it or the tire wagon may call on you. . Christmas ties are all right. Every i body else wears them. Go on, don’t | he so self-conscious, j Our government is experimenting with • hogs. Yes,-leal hojs. No. not office seekers. Department of Agriculture is trying to track hogs to bring home the bacon with more lean. One-seventeenth of the world’s people live in the United States, and should be j glad of it. The I'nited States spends more on > education than the rest of the world. | y<t lias so little. j There are 6.500.000 illiterates in the j Ciiited States, which is ignorance on their parlgg j About 35 per cent, of London’s war ' | widows have married again. Beware j ! of widows during Leap Year. j BILLY SEN'DAY Ttt CHASE DEVIL OCT OF SALJSBCRY ;To Appear There fur One Service on Monday. January 14th. I Salisbury Post. Billy Sunday is coining to Salisbury for a service. Tlie famous evangelist will be here !on Monday, January 14th, for a single j service which will likely be held in the | First Metliodjst Church. Monday i« the weekly holiday for Mr. Sunday and | lie will give us an hour of this weekly | rest day. The service will be held at j o'clock. \ Mrs. Sunday, known universarriy as "Ma” Sunday, will be with her husband anti likely Whcr members of the famous • _____ $ nnooooooooocoooooooooooooo IFERNDEJ.Iv Corn, Okra, Tomatoes, Pens, J S String Beaus, Carrots —Anything '5 good to yat —in the Ferndell j< Dove-Bost Co. j Whecp Quality Reigns ! j Supreme ] < oooooooooo<x»ooooooooooo<yv: niiiiiHiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiii COAL AND WOOD HIGHEST QUALITY Lime Plaster Cement PHONE 74 K. L. Graven & Sons lllllliilllllllllllinilllilllHlillllllllllililllll Money Is too scarce to C spend for any kind o equipment that is not en tircly dependable. W« would not offer any elec tricat equipment that lacked the guarantee its maker to us. Our KjM guarantee to you is that ■■ any motive equipment HR bought here must give LJ “Fixtures of Character” Im U VV. J. HETHCOX It! PJ Electrical Fixtures ■1 \Y. Depot St. Phone <M9 ] w organization will also'be hero on the 14th. Mr. W. F. Cooper, who ifc.a j personal friend of the Sundays, was in ( communication with Mr. Matthews, Mr. i Sunday's secretary, on yesterday and ] was promised the first open date. Mr. , Sunday expressed a desire to come to 1 Salisbury and Mr. Cooper was assured i] that he would come. This morning Mr. i Sunday was in conversation with Mr. 1 Cooper and told him to make arrange- J ments for the date and time given i above. Mr Sunday made but one request and , that was that the offering be made for the benefit of an orphanage which he maintains himself at Winona Lake. Ind Wincna is a famous resort for religious gatherings, conferences and chautauquas and this orphanage is sup ported by Mr. Sunday. He makes it a rule to give every penny received from these special services to this institution . and he would ask that this well estab lished custom be followed in this ease. In the Hall of Representatives. in i Boston, hnngs a wooden codfish. “The Sacred Cod." it is called, “as a memorial of the importance of the Cod Fishery to the welfare of this Com monwealth.'’ in accordance with a resolution passed in 1784. .MASONIC NOTICE. Regular Communication Stokes Lodge No. 32 A. F. & A, M.. Monday night, January 7th. 15)24. As this will be the first meeting held for the year 15)24. I urge all Master Masons to be present promptly at 7:30 p. m. Visitors wel come. G. W. QREECH. Secretary. NOTICE. ! The annual meeting of the stockhold ers of the Citizens Bank and Trust Com pany will be held in the office Os said bank in the City of Concord, N. C., on Monday, January 14, 15)24, at ten o'clock A. M. A. F. GOODMAN, Cashier, i Dee. 28-2wks- chg. i■- ■ - .I’"””" For Coughs DR. GIBSON’S SYRUP OF WHITE PINE CO. ; j TAR AND HONEY Large Bottle " 25c | | Gibson Drug Store i i tt:i2 Trrr; rt-t iTjairaggiiiiHLiJirga IMEL-RRO LOTION For Eczema, Eruptions, Black- i|i heads, Dimples, Barber's lieh, Tet- ji! ter. Ring Worm and other forms of 1 parasitic skin diseases. FRICE 50 CENTS Phone 333 Clines Pharmacy $ jOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOc CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET tCorrected Weekly by Clute & Moose.) Figures named represent priced paid tor produce on the market: Eggs .40 Butter 35 Country Ham .25 te ,3)i Country Shoulder 16 j Country- Sides 1C Young chickens .20 Hens .17 Turkeys .25 to .80 Lard .12 1-2 ■ Sweet Potatoes SI.OO Irish Potatoes .90 Onions $1.50 Peas $1.50 Corn SI.OO CONCORD COTTON MARKET. SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, 1*24 Cotton 34 Cotton seed .66 i We Have the follow- I ing Used Gars For Sale or Exchange: One Ford Touring One Chevrolet Sedan One Buick Touring One Oakland Tour ing. One Overland Tour ing. STANDARD BUICK CO # MPANY Opposite City Fire Dept quantities of CO or more one cent each, at Times-Trlbune Office. 13-ts-p. ■ Old Newspapers, 5 Cents a E jtl of 25. | at limes and Tribuna office. | ( | ioooc<)oooooofe<>ooooooooooooooGcfr<>oooooooooooooaaoo<yy |;. ][ UNDERWEAR FOS WINTER DAYS | HOOVER’S Inc. ;!| THE YOUNG MAN’S STORE t { 00000000000000y.JU00Q0CKXX>0COO000QG00000O00000000000000 || SPECIAL SATURDAY jj Any Winter Hat in stock for ohly $5.00 SPECIALTY HAT SHOP || j SCARBORO S I 1 NEW LINE DRESS GINGHAMS ! H 32-Inch Fine Quality Dress Ginghams 29c 1 32-Inch Fine Quality Plaid Dress Ginghams OQ_ ! | 32-Inch Fast Color Year-round Suitings A.fin I | for OC I | I 32-Inch Year Round Zephyr Cloth 39c n SCARBORO’S NEXT TO GIBSON DRUG STORE j ; FIRE SHOVELS FREE g I have 30 gross or 4,320 extra heavy 24-inch japanned fire shovels B jj which I will deliver free of charge to every bouse within the city limits jj and one mile outside: If yon don't get your shovel by January 10, 1924, il telephone 244—you will get it quick. ’ A. B. POUNDS | s coai* ice and service | If you want that genuine feeling of j satisfaction invite us to your next j i jjj blowout. : We live up to our guarantee ot ab ijj solute satisfaction in all our vulcaniz- j j Motor & Tire Service Co. Saturday, January 5j 1^24
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 5, 1924, edition 1
8
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