Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Jan. 7, 1924, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE SIX DOINGS OF THE DtJFFS An Out BY ALLMAN BH|4%u..3or»»?sam /what do you suppose!* I DORIS I’LL HAVE TO WORK A / CAME OVER HIM ALL OF W/ I '( LITTLE LATE SO I GOT A (A SUDDEN?TAKING ME j I J. COUPLE OF TICKETS FOR ' TO A SHOW OF HIS j I S THE SHOW-1-WISH YOU ( OWN freewill- < L WOULD COME DOWN AND L WELL, I’LL GO AND DOPE / mm gM88E g3 5333 3 3 1! BBi aSS* u - ir-tTRia j VISIT THE SCIENTIFIC PALMIST 1 MADAME ALLEN If you are unhappy, discouraged, unsuccessful in doubt, or jjjf lro "^* e ’ this wonderful palmisl can positively change your j;j vl condition, many who were on the brink of uncertainty, to- i,l day are resting easily in the lap of luxury by acting on TO THOSE UNHAPPY AND DISCONTENTED—If |4 you are separated from the one you love or in trouble from any cause ||| consult her NOW. Would you like to marry quickly? Have you any yj trouble over any affair in life? jjj J Do you want more success? Ifso you need her advice, she not only tells ||| vou of your troubles but how to overcome them. No question asked, she will tell you all. There is no home so dreary and sad, no life so jj| wicked or blighted, no heart so sad and lonely, no condition or cireuiu- L stance so complicated or incomprehensible that can’t be set right and |i| sept right after a visit to her, common sense says go and partake of H I these advantages and in after years you will be spared the saddest of |1 words “It might have been.” Private room for colored people. Office Hours: 10 a. m. to 9 :30 p. m. 22 West De|>ot Street. Dnsenbery House. Concord, N. C. Li Hie Penny Ads. Get Results —Try Them. It Pays to Put an Ad. in The Tribune U Emancqjation I Gas Service — I .SB •' a \ * s-._ H Brings leisure and .independence to the American S ss housewife. £j | K : > Conseryes strength and health tty eliminating a drudgery. Makes happy, attractive, ! contented homes by S furnishing cheerful, eye-comforting illumina- 5= tion, quick intense heat or Steady, dependale £ • warmth. == away with disease-laden smoke, grime, soot, jg ashes and fumes. ese Saves linens, draperies, rugs, upholstery, wall paper, jgj = furniture and clothes. = m' ■ 5E Helps us all to have a pleasanter place in which to s = live and enjoy the good health that goes with S j A service as intimate as this must needs be friendly. || I Concord & Kannapolis Gas Co. | Billlmards anil Newspapers. 11 Philadelphia Record, i Two pieces of news come to readers j within the past few days, both from j i London. One refers to the dismantling of 0000 roadside advertising signs by a j large gasoline selling corporation as j part of a movement to end the dis | figurement of the English landscape 1 with advertisements. Tire and other i manufacturers have also joined in rc- I moving the posters that have proved of ■ fensive and the organizations of nature- I overs have reason jto feel that! they j have won a notable victory so far in j their efforts to purge the countryside of I the billboards. The other news items I announces the departure of Sir Charles | Highain for the United States early in j the new year. As England's chief pub -1 lieity man. Sir Charles has been oom j missioned by India tea growers to be ]! gin a campaign for the wider use of I tea in America.. This he will do through 1 the advertising columns of the daily newspapers. Giacomo Puccini. composer of , “Madame Butterfly." has recovered in Italy because “One Fine day” was taken from the opera and jazzed, ac cording to reports. CSR THK 1-KWJfT COI.ITMN—IT FAYS ITUS CUN CORD DAILY TRIBJNL Clearance of all 4 ( Merchandise I i FISHER’S! •1 1 i , i i Ladies' Outing : Gowns in White and Colors I < Sale Price 88c up ; i Children’s Outing Gowns 88c up Children’s Sleeping Garments With Feet 95c Each WOOL MIXED SPORT HOSE in broad range of col ors, for misses and la dies. A Dandy, Ser viceable Stocking for this weather at 88c Pair Heavy Ribbed Silk Hose For Wear A Real Stocking For ; Today and one that : will wear. We know You Will Be Pleased - it’s a value I Sale Price SI.OO pair j BOYS AND GIRLS’ | SCHOOL HOSE | Sale Special, some \ are medium weight in broken sizes. Sale Price 15c [ All Wool School Sox iin Heather Mixed 1 Colors, Valu eto 95c, [ COATS, SUITS; | Sale Price 39c pair DRESSES E * | Now is the time and | this is the place. All | Coats, Suits, Dresses | included liri this sale 2 at prices that you i will be pleased with, f Ladies* and Chil- I dren’s Coats $3.00 up I Dresses $2.00 up | Suits $6.95 up BK W- \ ■pL s?■ s I Ladies’ Infants’ and I Children’s Under to | your liking I Phone 325 (FISHER’S It Pays GIVES MODERN Vflwfr OF THE SAHARA DESERT I Tourist Parties Now "Do" the Section With Easy Comfort. Philadelphia Record. The impressions of the Sahara Rotten from- the school geographies are all wrong, according to Horace D. Ashton, of Vonker*. N. Y.. Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and member of the Explorers’ Club, who gave an xi'nintrated talk before the Geographical Society in Witherspoon Hall, last night, on "By Caravan Through the Garden of Allah.’' One of the pictures shown was a real istic representative of a standstorm. tak en by ai specially designed camera. So far from the Sahara being one vast plain of sandy flatne*), the lecturer said that when he was sent to take photo graphs of sand dunes in that district, he had to go Tikl miles from Algiers be fore he could find enough sand to be dig nified by the appelation “dune.” There is a belt of sand, between 150 and 200 miles wide, whieh goes on for 1,300 mil«-% but the Sahara itself contains ice capped mountains 10,000 feet high, and depressions from 0.000 to 7,000 feet deep. Travel on the Sahara has been made comfortable, he said, since the French occupation, and touring parties now "do” the desert with cold water at every meal and clean sheets on bedu and clean -table linen every day. He ridiculed the claim of a French automobile concern purporting to show that with five of its cars the great waste was gone over, back and forth, in six weeks. ”1 happen to know that it took 18 months,’' he said, “and the preparations used up 30 cars. There was a whirl wind finish in six weeks by five cars, and of that it was made to nppear that the tractor cars of this particular house had performed a miracle on the Sa hara.” TODAY’S EVENTS Monday, January 7th. Centenary of the birth of Charles Lafayette Mae Arthur, noted American newspaper editor and publisher. The name of the winner of the Ed ward W. Bok prize of SIOO,OOO for the best plan for bringing world peace is expected to be announced today. \V. Freeland Kendrick, who was elect ed mayor of Philadelphia last Novem ber, is to begin his administration today The distinction of being the only American city of prominence to have a clergyman as police chief belongs to Paducah, Ky., where A. 1,. Leigh, a Baptist preacher, will become head of the police department today. The Interstate Commerce Commission today will hear the final oral arguments of counsel for the railroad)* in the com mission’s investigation into the possibil ity of railroad consolidation in the Vnited States. At Mfheola, It 1., the second trial is scheduled to begin today of the case of William M. Creasy, of Fort Thomas. Ky., who is under conviction of first degree murder in connection with the heath of his fiancee, Miss Edith Lavoy. a school teacher. A mammoth 'Cvdlrotrrc (tankage- suit brought against the German govern ment by 80,000 Belgians who were de ported during the war is to come up for hearing today before the German-Bel giitn mixed Arbitration Tribunal sitting in Paris. Presidents and executive officers of state and national farm organizations), with a membership of over 700,000 farmers, representing most of the whent and cotton growing states, are to hold a four-day demonstration in Washington this week in support of the Norris- Hinclalr government marketing corpora tion bill. Fenner and Beane’s Grain Letter. Chicngo, Jan. 4.—Wheat was quiet and easier at the outset, with Weaker cables, a limited export demand, and scattered selling due to continued fav orable news from abroad, and with claims that Argentine and Australia were underselling Mantobn wheats. On the break, scattered support developed and the market rallied sharply, getting its stimulus from the strength in corn. The letter resulted In considerable cov ering of shorts and uncovered a strong technical position, the market closing strong at the day’s highs. A decided increase in speculative ac tivity in corn helped bring about a sharp upturn. Leading eastern and western professionals absorbed the early . offer ings, and started a sleeping short inter est covering. The buldge was not without foundation. Receipts were very light notwithstanding good weather, and even on the buldge no material in crease in country offerings was noted. Cash demand was good, and the cash market led the advance, bulging more than two cents a bushel. Oats averaged somewhat higher, help ed materially by the buldge in corn and the strength in other feed grains with shorts covering on the small receipts. The bulge brought about considerable : profit taking. j Fenner and beane. * Hie Stone Mountain Monument. t Charlotte Observer. ' To the people who have not kept pace (with the progress of the great memorial [, work on Stone Mountain, under the di > reotion of the sculptor Borglum, word that one of the panels, that commemo rating General Lee and his staff, has been finished and will be unveiled* on the 10th will surprise. The exercises will be under the management of the ‘ Stone Mountain Confederate Monumen tal Association, and are of official sanc tion by the state of Georgia. The un veiling of the first group of statuary will be occasion for a great gathering of Confederates and descendants. The com pleted grouping wilU constitute one of the greatest marvels in memorial work l lin the world. There will be carved • [ on the sloping sides of a large mountain of solid granite a succession of panels that will in ,fact represent the Confed erate army in review. Borglum will fret the honor, but to the women of Georgia and the Bouth will belong the glory. An Expensive Notice. Pat—“ What be yer charge for a funeral notice ta yer paper?” . I Editor —“Fifty cents an inch.” ' ' Pat-—“ Good heaven! An’ me poor l hi other was six feet high-” ’ I The City of London has a night | population'of 18,708, but during the day . there is an influx of more than 400,- * 000, without counting casual viiiton. i M HP*’ » St. Mawes Lad's Lady, champion Jersey of Henry D. Blif. Inde pendence, Ore., has lust completed a production of 15,229 pounds of milk and 1032.97 pounds of biitterfat during a single year’* test. ~ Fortune Smiles Late! « fortune loft him in Chantilli. France. The aged man is reputed a lineal descendant of French nobility, and when found by his daughter after a 25-year search was peddling pencils in the Windy City. | SPLENDID FARMS FOR SALE j ]ll 55 acres on public road four miles north of Court House. C room . i 1 1 1 house, double barn, out buildings, timber, 25 acres dredged bottom. ' 111 238 Acres near Georgeville, 7 room house, outbuildings, $5,000. SI,OOO ! I i cash, balance on easy terms. | ' 13S acres ou public road 3 miles north of Court House, splendid build- j j k tags, 50 acres dredged, bottom-land, a splifjnjid dairy -farm, sl,pfto X 11 cash, balance on easy terms. ' | 175 acres, the Cotes place, in No. 7 township, on public road, good iji neighborhood, good buildings, timber, at a real bargain. V 108 acres at Glass, the Rogers farm, very desirable, will sell as a whole j or cut it to v suit the purchaser. i 33 acres on public road 4 miles nortneast of Concord, with good i i 1 buildings. i |j[ 103 acres on Concord-Midland Highway with good buildings, $40.00 per iji ' 80 acres two miles east of Kannapolis, $40.00 per acre. j | ] | 98 acres two railed cast so Kannapolis with buildiugs and timber. ij 80 acres on Big Cold Water Creek at Ilowan County line with build- ]|. ] i [ ings, very productive. i l 1 ; 200 acres on Highway two miles from Midland with splendid buildings. 1 CITY PROPERTY FOR SALE Modern 5-room cottage in good repair on Kerr Street near No. 2 ]|- school. i i ! i The Novelty Building on Elm street near Brancord Mill at a real j » j| bargain. ! | House and lot on Green street at Hartsell mill, lot 120x300 feet. i i i Fine fruit trees. | | One beautiful vacant lot on corner of Meadow and Vanee streets , ! 80x133 feet, on easy terms. i Ofie vacant lot on Simpson street 60x150 feet. Modern 6-foom cottage, lot 60 feet wide extending from Vance to 1 1 Simpson street. 11 [i 7-room house on East Corbin street with modern Improvements. Jij 1 11 Large lot. i j i. i i 0-room house on McGill street with modern improvements. - i The Novelty Building, lot 60x120 feet on Elm street, cheap at , ! $1,200.00. i j i 6-room house, an acre of land on St. George street. 11 i 1 3-room house on Houston street, SBSO. ] [ ! 4-room bouse on St. Charles street, $1,000.00. Terms easy. f Jno. K. Patterson & Co. j Real Estate Agents |p DELCO-LIGHT j Farm Electric Service || Lights, Water Systems, Washing \ Machines Call the Delco Light Man R. H. OWEN | : Phone 669 Concord, N. C. : j ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooboooooooooooooooo ’ p WlfT ? !rcgTi*tiyg4--I*|V37 , BiPBMgM-4Jgl-l-A4-41-g-1iy51«5-^44M4gygii ! ll-^-4il*tWsslgßlg|glWffießH l Y I Who Pays For Advertising? Not the manufacturer, for he thereby procures more business, the profits from which more than offset the ad vertising cost. v Not the retailer, for advertised brands sell easiest, turn quickest and therefore yield she greatest on the amount invested per year. Not the person who buys the advertised article, for j| \ the cost of production has been brought down by increased y business and the cost of selling has been reduced because H advertising haS already practically completed the sale. H Advertising is an investment which produces returns □ and therefore pays for itself. Monday, January 7, 1§24
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 7, 1924, edition 1
6
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