Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Jan. 12, 1924, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO PENNY COLUMN * Barly Showing of New Spring Hats, «w«t styles,* on- Monday, January 14th. Next to St. Cloud Hotel, in old West ern Union office. Mrs. J. A. Duflje. The National Home Sewfef Clqb, At l&ntn, Ga.. furnishes materia is ami pays women liberally for fancy work (tone at home. Addressed, stamped en velope brings particulars. 12-lt-p. Mem Wanted to Qualify for Firemen, brakemen. also colored sleeping car and train porters. Experience unnec essary. Transportation furnished. T. McCaffrey. Supt., St. Louis. 12-Jt-p. Good Six-Room House With Good Big , lot, close in, 105 E. Depot Street, for sale at a bargain. Must be sold at once. Jesse McClelland. ts-p. Colored Dining Car Walters and Sleep ing car porters wanted. Experience unnecessary. We train you. Infor mation free. Write 443 Railway Ex change. Omaha, Nebraska. 27-12 t-p. ov. Sat. Wanted—7,2oo Salespeople Now -Make big money selling Watkin’s nationally advertised household products. Von can too. Branches all over IT. S. and Canada. Rare chance just now for city sales dealers, men or women, full or part time, in the city of Concord and elsewhere. Write today for our practical, sure money-making plan. J. it. Watkins Company, Dept. 90. 155- 150 Terry St., New York, N. Y. 5 & 12-c. For Rent—Two Rooms With Meat and bath. Ladies preferred. Phone 88. 1-ts-c. Wanted—To Do Your Plumbing and heating repair. M. O. Love, Phone 191. 10-4 t-p. • Found—Pair- of Spring Scales. Owner may get same by calling at this office and paying for this advertisement. ;j 11 - 2 t - - Wanted —Your Old Frozen Radiator. Phone 562 J. Chas. H. Foil. 9-4 t-p. A NEW shipment of ALCOHOL, Good and fresh, at Long's Filling Station. S-st-p. Do You Know What PEP Is? BENZO LINE has PEP and every car ownei should use it as it starts quicker and IS CLEANER than any gasoline. Long's Filling Station is the only place in this county which sells it. Try it in cold weather and save your battery. 8-st-p. Oranges and Tangerines 50c Peck for balance this week. Sanitary Grocery Company. 8-5-t-p. Man. Woman Wanted. Salary $75 Week ly full time, $1.50 an hour spare time, selling guaranteed hosiery to wearer. Cottons, heaters, .silks. Guaranteed Mills, Norristown, Pa. iislgt-p. •/ i . r Post and Flagg’s Cotton Letter. New York, Jan. 11.—Speculative in terests ere believed to be turning "from cotton to stocks on the ground that cotton has really had its move and at this level is suitable for only legiti mate trade operations, while the next market to show any real strength and activity will be stocks. However ihat may be cotton is a powerful magnet for the speculative element and with any real encouragement another wove of buying would quickly istart in ihat quarter. Dullness, however, is still the feature of the goods markets and more predictions of a coming revival of acti vity there will not affect sentiment to any extent. That with the resulting prospect of further curtailment by domestic mills serves' for the time being to offset tolly the continued incre isihgly I bullish spot advices, and until there is a change that implies reliable, broader distribution of goods even at advances. EFIRD’S I Pre - Inventory j Sale Giving Absolutely the Low est Prices on High Class Merchandise Prevailing in the Yeqr. Don’t Miss This I Bargain Feast. j * Salepsueo—MOO Month and Expenses ‘ 'setting' chars'.' Experience -7 neces sary. Send addressed stamped envel . ope for information. Box 135, High Point, N. G. 12-lt-p. • Men Over If l»Ung to Travel. | secret investigations. Reports- Sjal t ary. and expenses. Experience unnec essary. Write J. Ganor, Former Govt. Detective. St. Louis. 12-lt-p. , Electricity Taught by Experts. Earn r while you learn at home. Electrical book and proof lessons free. Satisfac tion guaranteed and position secured. White to Chief Engineer Cooke. 2144 Lawrence Ave., Chicago. . 12-lt-p. , Found on North Church Street—Hand I saw. Owner can get possession by paying for this ad. and calling on H. T. Utley, at Frieze & Utley's Marble Yard. 12-lt-p. . Wanted—Factory Representative to In troduce necessary new product to dealers, exclusive territory, permanent connection with large repeat order commissions. Men making SIOOO.OO 1 and up monthly. References required. Box 244, Dunkirk, N. Y. 12-lt-p. i . - . ■ i ' House Ror Rent on North Spring Street. water aria fights. Mrs. John Welsh. I 11-2 t-p. _ For Sato nr Rent. One Six Room House and lot, on the National Highway, about one mile south of Kannapolis. N. C. See L. C. Basinger, Kannapo lis, N. C. % 10-tit-c. I Spring Pattern Hats From New York and Chicago. Miss Braehen J s Bonnet Shop. 1 10-3 t-p. Lost—Twenty Sacks of Rags. Return and get reward or phone 502.1. Wanted" rags. Chas. H. Foil. 8-6 t-p. SOx 3 1-2 Lancaster Cord Tires, $9.50. Yorke & Wadsworth Co. 7-6 t-c. If You Want To Save Money on Tires see Yorks & Wadsworth Co. at once. 7-ot-e. Visiting Cards Handsomely Printed, SO for SI.OO. or 100 for $1.50. Times- Tribune Office. ts. See Yorke A Wadsworth Co. Before Buy ing your next tires. 7k>t-c. For Rent—Store Room on West Depot street. Apply to Joe Gaskel. 9-ts-c. Visiting Cards Handsomely Printed, 50 for SI.OO. or 100 for $1.50. Times- Tribunc Office. ts. Tires That Stand. We Have Prices That are right. Ritchie Hdw. Co. Phone 117. 18-ts-c. 30x3 1-2 Cord Tires s9.so.Yorke & Wads worth Co. 7-6 t-c. For Sale—Six-Horse Power Gasoline engine and saw rig. H. L. Wallace, .Harrisburg. 12-10 t-p. the rallies in the contract market are not likely to go fur or hold well, "and it is even more desirable to wait for reactions to buy. There is not the slightest pressure from spots, however, or any sign that such is impending so that while in a market so thin and sen sitive fluctuations must necessarily be wide.-it looks very risky to be shirt in expectation of any really lasting de cline. which can come only from pres sure from the actual, when holders for some reason find it wise or neces sary to offer their cotton at a constant ly easier basis.. Directly the opposite seems the case at present. since accord ing to best advices, the basis is stiffen ing and buyers are plentiful- POST AND FLAGG. Open sugar bowls are prohibited in public eating places in Akron. 0., on the ground that they are insanitary and a menace to health. “‘ Il 1 •" ■■■Jen ■■ .. ■ ■■ e. ■ ■ - , jj|~ fjrf .. ' ... ig&jßE In and about the &ty 1 . STORES TO CLOSE EARLIER s ON SATURDAY IN FUTURE ’ Practically All of the Business House* , of the City Agree to Clpae Stop at . A campaign for earlier'' closing of g Stores on Saturday nights, started in this . jcity some time l ago, has been* sueeess . fully waged and many of the - business . bouses in the business section announce that beginning January 18th they will . close their doors at 8 p. m. each Satur • day. 1 The formal announcement was made - in the form of an advertisement which . appears in this paper today. The M- I lowing stores have agreed to the new closing rule: Parks-Belk Co., Efird's, Ivey Shoe I Store, S. S. Brown Shoe Store, J. E. 1 Love, Parker's Shoe Store, Riehmond • Flowe Co.. W. A. Overcash, Hoover’s. ‘ luc.. The Musette, Inc., Specialty Hat Shop, W. C. Correll Jewelry Co., City \ Grocery. The Propst Co., the Sanitary ’ Grocery Co.. H. B. Troutman, Yorke , & Wadsworth Co., McLelltfa Store Co, Ritchie-Caldiyell Co., Rifehie Hardware j Cm. M. R. Pounds, Starnes-Miller-Park cr Co., f’itizens Bank nud Trust Com pany. Cabarrus Savings Bank. Cash ' Feed Store, Lippard & Barrier. Cabarrus Cash Grocery. Cline & Moose, Orchard ' Produce Co.. Piggly Wiggly, J. W. Cline and Kidd Frix Go. The advertisement is inserted by the s Merchants’ Association and declares “the undersigned members of the association [ agree to close their doors promptly at . 8 o'clock each Saturday night beginning Saturday, January 19th, 1924.” AN APPRECIATION Mr. Editor: The gifts of nature are manifested in \ many wonderful ways, but the things • that are most familiar to us we fre quently fail to appreciate; indeed the • grandest sights of the universe—the • starlit heavens, the western sky at sun set, the undulating landscape—we ac ' cept as of course, and let pass almost unthought of. -It is not only in its ' larger aspects that enjoyment is to be found, but in almost all nature artistic > combinations exist until destroyed by the . intrusion of man. The artistic derange ment can be re-arranged in a more for . mal garb by those who by taste and . study are qualified to do so. . This is merely to intrqduce a tbought regarding, and call attention to one of the beauty spots of Concord: in other words, to the post office building and the ( grounds surrounding it. The artistic merit of Hie selection of the trees and shrubs is apparent at a gliutce: especial low now when the brilliant colors of summer are gone and the foliage lias 1 dropped from the forest trees. The de : sign, which has been so well carried out. was to form an arboreal frame for the building that would be. attractive at all times of the year and under all condi tions of weather. The landscape ar chitect who designed the picture is to 1 be congratulated, and we wbo are per mitted to enjoy it should be thaukful. IV. H. DEWEES. January 12 ,1924. 1 *• - « , j 1 1 . . JJtif /fa A ojbbor/u/fi/y^ |l , ___ If you have been plan- Ijj niug to make your home f more attractive by the LfH '|S aid of decorative light ing fixtures, we suggest JLJffi ffi 41 that you grasp the op- Kjffi portunity presented by WM the arrival of new stock to ffi here to make your solve- BjJg “Fixtures of Character” ■ I W. J. HETHCOX mM Electrical Fixtures M \V. Depot St. Phone 969 JfcJ We Have the follow ing Used Cars For Sale cu* Exchange: One Ford Touring One Chevrolet Sedan One Buick Touring One Oakland ing. One Overland Tour-1 THE CONCORP J>AILY TRIBUNE STOCKHOLDERS RF FAIR i ASSOCIATION IN SESSION elected. '■?*• r Stockholders of the Cabarrus County 1 Fair Association held their first uywtiag ' of 'the year FrMaJrtwlght in the offices *of Secretary. Dr. 4, ft. Spencer. I® - the absence of President J. F. Cannon, I Vice President W, A. Foil presided. All of the old officers were re-elected by the stockholders, and H. W. Cald - well was added to the board of direc -1 tors. yT After the stockholders adjourned, the directors met. They appointed Spen cer, H. A. Goodman, C. W. Swink, Cald- j ■ well and Foil a Committee to go ahead ■ with all plans for the 1924 fair. Foil and Swink were appointed a com • mittee to audit the books of the secre t tary. This was done and they report ' that all finances were found in excel ' lent condition. New Principal at Sunderland. ‘ Miss Alice Thompson, the new princi pal of the Laura Sunderland School, ar ■ rived about the first of the year, and i is now in active charge of this popular ( school for girls, succeeding Yliss Melissa I Montgomery, who held this position for ' 27 years. Miss Tlioiiipson comes from the Asheville Normal College where she ‘ had been a member of the faculty for ■ the i»ast nine years. Another change i in the faculty is that of Miss Beatrice Moller. who conies 'from the Wasatch Academy, in rtafc.jjto supervisor of the kitchen and dining gobm. YVliile it is regretted that Miss Mont gomery gave up the work at Sunderland where she so ably carried on the work of tiie school, thee school is to be con gratulated on haring at its head Miss i Thompson, an educator of ability aud ■ experience. Mins Montgomery was pop ■ ular with numbers •of our people in the ■ city, where she tofik an active part in the civic and church life of tbe com - muiyt.v. Miss Montgomery has gone to Knox ville, Tenn„ where she will spend some time resting at the *'brume of her brother. It's sometimes better to back down than to got your back up. Our Clearance Sale is * \ ■; in Full Progress j PARKER’S SHOE STORE Between Parks-Belk and McLellan 5 and 10c Store ' IHMI———MB' MW— •flteseare the fundamental in yl > economical price end Il iSI/ v. perform* eqiielly^Sfid (f Vli/yCZr 3 A wide variety of 1 4 Buick authorized * zenrite available every where throughout tbe i life of the car* ,-^-u-sr When better automobiles arc buik Buick will build them STANDARD BUICR CO j Holiday Sale I ISoalve” SPECIAL BATTERY PRICES 1 P °CE?UINf. W).00 1 BKJU^I^M^CE I °STATIQN : Indicted on Liquor Chargee, He Stands Trial in Statesville Court.—Then Van- Hiekbry, Jau. 11.—Ed. Lippard, moon- Nhiner and bootlegger, forfeited his tend: in Federal Court at Statesville today and is thought to-have fled the State. He 1* tinder bond also iq Burlje and Ca|qwta <w serious charges, that in Burke being tor liquor and in Catawba f°X ir%B?iW‘>tl* h young girl tor im moral purposes. Lippard’s case . was concluded yester day afternoon, but when Judge Webb, convened court this morning Lippard’s lawyers, Joe. L. Murphy, Jr., of Hickory, and Hayden Burke, of Taylorsville, were surprised when he did not appear. A jury found him guilty. W. 8, Stroup, well known Hickory I man, is said to have gone on his bond in the sum of $1,700. Philip J. Dodge’s Optimism. Philadelphia Record- Philip T. Dodge, president of the International Paper Company, is optimistic over the business outlook, but his optimism is tempest With a note of caution. He said recently- “If I read the signs of the business sky aright the demand far newsprint will be strong throughout the greater part of the year. This should spell prosperity for the pnper-mnking industry. But risk is of Hie essence of business. It doesn't pay to be sure. The unexpected so often happens. It is bcst 'to make allowance for the fact that the future may not be as bright as it looks and so to organize your affairs ha even he shock of ad verse condiious canno disturb you great ly.’’ The demand for newsprint means a demand for newspapers, due to phe nomenal circulation such as “The Record" has gained in the past year, and increased advertising space, used by wise business men. They know how to keep the wheels moving, and no long er look upon advertising in the daily, newspapers as an exiieriment. It has proved .its worth to their full satis faction. The late Carl Hagenbeek, the great aninutl dealer, made many experiments in crossbreeding. -He successfully crossed the lion and tiger, their progney having a tiger's body and a lion's head. t Instead of 10 O'clock | • <4 '■'*.l ■il. . •Mini a" ■’A. l|l Ull... u.,|,.-jljj The Great Jatwy Reduction Sale j 1 Be Sure and Come Next Week Parks-Belfc Co. | Big Sale All Next Week and Until I January 28th. j Remember, everything in our Big ? ;;; Store atfrom 10 to 50 per cent, reduc- | !| tion for our January Clearance Sale. - ; Look for the Yellow Tags with the re |]| duced price on them. I Some stores advertise Big Sales and Reductions but do not reduce > anything and some stores mark the goods up and reduce them hack to '* j I the regular price for a sale. But in i j our sales if we advertise goods reduc - .11 ed we reduce them, so you can see for jll yourself. Look at Yellow Sale Tag || for Sale Price and you can see the dis -1 |i ference as we mark all goods in plain i| figures. No blind marks used j; We mention a few of the Price Re -11 ductions that will last as long as the | goods last. '•! All Millinery at One-half price and * !jl less.- J ; i & . ' f Ladies’, Misses’ and Children’s Hats I reduced ter 49c to $7.45. - Rig Reductions on all Ribbons for ; this sale. From 10 to 75 per cent, off for a quick clearance. All Ladies’, Children’s and Misses’ * Sweaters at a Tremendous cut. From 25 to 50 per cent. oflf. AH Men’s, Ladies’ and Children’s Shoes at Sweeping Reductions. A quick clearance, 10 to 75 per cent, off, j All House Furnishings at Big Cut. Silks and Wool Goods at from 15 to 75 per cent, reductions to clean up all odds and ends quick. All Men’s and Boysl Clothing at a 2 Tremendous reduction, 25 tq 50fper-' 1 cent. off. Cotton goods at Big Cut also, on fia- 4 sis of 22 to 25 cent cdttoji prices. Big cut op Ladies’ Chifefeeq’s sad j i j Misses and Men’s'Hosi?, Sc to $2.25. I One lot Ladies’Full Fashion Ladies’ I j I Hose on sale at 89c and 98c. \ I One lot Ladies’ Chifion Silk Hose at I 89c, 9Sc and sl*29. 7 Parks-Belk Co. IBe sufrand that %t- 5 I *urday January l%h our store 9 10 o’clock. « . - - *. r* r\i'7'v m&v&i S3 Saturday lannarv 12 1024
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Jan. 12, 1924, edition 1
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