Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / May 17, 1924, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAGE TWO PENNY COLUMN , Stop Your Car Every After noon at “King’s Road Stand.” 15-3 t-p. CITY I4CKNSB TAGS FOB AUTOMO BILEB, -TRUCKS. MOTORCYCLES, OWNED AND OPERATED BY PER SONS. FIRMS OR CORPORATIONS IN THE CITY LIMITS CAN BE SECURED AT MY OFFICE NOW. EVERYONE MIST PURCHASE TAG AT ONCE UNDER CITY LAW. THEY WERE DUE MAY IST. N. FIELD, CITY TAX COL Lfccro*. • io-7t. wanted—To Rent a Place in the Coun try to raise chickens, some distance from homes and cultivated lands. Worn oat tend all efeht. W. A. Crain. Box J36A, Route 1, Coacord. 17-lt-p. Two Unfurnished Roams For Light housekeeping, close in, 60 E. Depot St. 17-2 t-p. For Sale—Dmwthgr Norman Wants to sell her Pope bicycle. Factory cost *■16.40. Tile first check for *25.00 gets it. Call at 24 Tribune street. ; 17-lt-p. -3 • ■■ ; Monty to LoSto on IrotM-everi Kami Land, j Bogle & Bogle, Attorneys. Dixie Build-1 ing. 16-2 t-p. | For Rent—Room. Dixie Building Apply Dixie Ueul Estate Co. 10-ot-c. For Sale—Owe Briscoe Odr. One Ford dan and one Hup. Cash or credit. Prices *50.00 and up. If you do not lave the money to buy the gaso line will let you have it. All you need is the rash to buy the oil, just thirty cents. T. D. Maness. 16-3 t-p. Call 815 For Fresh and Cured Meats. ] i; Nice trout and butter fish. Query and jU-abery. 16-2 t-p. for Relit —Two or Three Furnished 1 * rooms for light housekeeping on Bell •{ Avenue.. Call 42®*. 13-3 t-p. tTVe Rooms For Rent Close in, 51 East Corbin street. Mrs. W. 31. CorZine. 14-4 t-p. Phone l's Your Orders for Fresh Veg etables. Green beaus, cukes, squash, tomatoes, green peas, lettuce, new po tatoes, green onions, pineapples and strawberries. We deliver. Ed. 31. Cook Company. 13-3 t-p. Wanted —La * es in This Locality to Em broider linens for Us at home during their, leisure moments. Write at once. ‘•Fashion Embroideries,’’ 1348. Lima. Ohio. 12-Ct-p. The Hawaiian Singers. The uki’lete is today the national in strument cf the Hawaiian people, and : is made from the koa wood which grows I on the island. There is an inexplicable \ something about Hiwauatr music .which I never fails to charm and once heard ,is | never forgotten. I | In T 778 Captain Cook discovered these | islands and for a century they were’ known as the Sandwich Islands, the title he bestowed upon them. Hawaii placed her star in Old Glory when the resolu tion for annexation was passed by Con gress and signed by President McKin- j ley in 1898. Long before the white man found i these islands the old Hawaiian melodies j were sung for the dancing of the liula.! and for religions ceremonies, and have I been handed down from one generation | to another, so that what you hear at | this Hawaiian concert the Redpath Chautauqua gives is what the natives sang when that enchanted spot of sun shine and flowers where God’s harmonies of color and sound encompassed the Hawaiian in an earthly paradise Hn the Pacific, where the limitless sea assured him safety. Don’t Forget EFJRD’S umui uu Specials For Saturday and Nice Fresh Fish—Large and medium trout. Cabarrus Cash Grocery Co. 16-3 t-p. Srawberries—KeHog’s Best, in quarts or gallons. Lu berger Place, on highway, Cook’s Cross Roads. 15-3 t-p. Wanted—Young Men or Women Work part time while taking business course. Tuition paid from guaranteed posi tions after graduation. Edwards Business College, High Point, N. C. 17-lt-p: Panama Hats Cleaned and Reblocked. We wish to call your attention to this department' of ou« works, which is modern and complete in every detail. Allow us to demonsrtate what mod ern methods and perfected processes can accomplish with a hat. We clean and reblock felt, velour, straw, I’anaba. Baluaig. Bangkok, leghorn and silk hats, for both ladies and men. We handle everything that can be cleaned or dyed. Write for price list. The Ben-Vonde Co., the South’s largest and exclusive cleaners and dyers. Dept. AL T Charlotte. N. C. 17-lt-p. Lithographed Certificates of Stork a»d Sfcils furnished hy the Times-Tribune Office. <f- Nice Native Spring Lamb. J. F. Day vault and Bro. 16-2 t-p. For Sale—Monarch Typewriter. Prfce .sls. Call at Times-Tribune Office, j 16-ts. Newest Summer llats $2.!K> ami $3.95. Miss Brachen’s Bonnet Shop. 15-3 t-p. For Rent —Five Room House Harsh St. W. A. Foil. Phone 130. 15-Sl-c. If Its Ice Boxes Yon Want. St* John H. Tew, 214 Buffalo, Street. Phone 477 W. 5-12 t-p. | Agents Represent a Real Mill. Sell the original guaranted Wear Proof hos | ier.v, all colors, cotton, lisle, silk. I Salary or commission; full or part i time. International Mill*. Norristown. ! Pa. 5-12-19-26-p. j City Taxes Must Be Paid This Month. All property on which taxes have not been paid will be advertised after May 31st, 1924. Chas. N. Field, City Tax Collector. 3-ts-c. Is it any wonder that songs born of blue waters, sunshine, flowers, birds and contentment have lived? I think the greater wonder is, that ft r a far away land we catch the spirit of hap piness of a people that ill those days were called savages. The melodics are rife with imagination of verdue ahd flower as the music floats dreamily out from the touch of the Hawaiian player. JIBS. W. H. GORMAN. The Olympic games of ancient Greece consisted at first of only a foot race of 210 yards. Gradually the number of events was increased until the program included three foot races, wrestling, boxing, the pancratium, which was a sort of boxing and wrestling combined, usually running, jumping throwing the discus, throwing the javelin and wrestling, and finally, as the program became more elaborat, various kinds of horses and chariot races. Among the foreign students at the Western College for Women. Oxford, 0.. is Miss Grace Shu, a niece of Nsnrng Shi I,ing. who was premier of. China during the first republic. IN AND ABOUT THE CITY HIGH SCHOOL CONTEST DRAWS CAPACITY CROWD Dec la mat ion-Rec Ration Contest Heard b> Audience That Packed School Audi torium. The first feature of the high schobl commencement for 1924 was held Friday evening at the new high school audi torium when the declanaraation-recita tion contest was staged. The eontest aate spoke to a capacity crowd, the handsome auditorium being filled to ca pacity by the interested audience. 31ms Virginia Batte won the recita tion medal, which is given each year by Junior Order No. 25. and the declama tion medal was won by Roy S. Saunders, i This medal is given annually by Charles B. Wagoner. Miss Batte recited “What the Fiddle Told,’’ and that she was the favorite was shown by the spontaneous applause that greeted the judges' announcement. Mr. Saunders chose Charles M. Schwab’s Idea of Success as his muflber and the announcement of his victory also was received with generous applause. The judges were Sirs. John A. Porter. Rev. M. R. Gibson and Buford Black- j welder. Mrs. Porter made the announce- j meut for the judges. Mrs. Porter in making public the judges' decision declared that Miss Uet tlm Sumer, who recited "The Sotii cf the Violin." was a close second to Miss Batte. Other contestants were Miss Rose Turner, Miss Myrtle Fink. Miss Mary Barbee White, Hubert Morris, Thomas L. Moose and James Cleaver. Many persons who have been attend ing the declamation-recitation contests for years were heard to remark that this 1 contest was one of the finest they had ever been plivilcged to hear. Several numbers were rendered dur ing the evening by the higli school or chestra under the direction of Prof. Price Doyle. The music proved one of the most pleasing features of the contest. The next feature of the high school commencement will be the annual play, which will be> presented May 39th. On Sunday morning June Ist, the bacca laureate sermon will be delivered by Rev. 1.. A. Thomas, pastor of St. James T.atjo eran Church, and on Monday eveuirtfc. June 2nd. the literary address will be delivered by Judge 31. L. Smith, of Camden. S. O. The medals won • Friday evening by Miss Batte and Mr. Sanders will be pre sented on the evening of June 2nd. prior to Judge Smith's address. The Chautauqua. The Redpath Chautauqua which opens Tuesday night. May 20th, was brought to Concord by the Woman's Club backed by sixty guarantors. These men have approved of the Chautauqua by their willingness to help us. and we want to show our appreciation of their interest iin the community spirit by being able to put the Chautauqua over, and I be lieve this can be accomplished if the people understand the way to buy a ticket. First, tickets are transferable in tlie owner's immediate family. Sec ond. that the $1,286.00 In lisp be paid to the Chautauqua from the sale of season tickets. Third, that money taken at the door from the sale of tickets goes to the Redpath Clmutaqua. If the people will read this article and buy season tickets for their families, they will help the Woman's Club to proteci tite gentle men who are guarantors. We ask the co-operation of all loyal citizens to help us make tliis a snceess by proving to the men who are behind the guns that we meant what we said when We asked them only for their good names. MRS. W. H. GORMAN. FlSI^ J. F. Dayvault & Bro. Phones 85 send 524 ' ' ■ i———W YES SAH! * HHI- will iriinerhtnMte the late Ber Williams by singing "Net Lately.’’ Tltii i song wi* the list song ever recorded b; Bert before Bis untimely death. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE KIWANIS MEETING AM tw by Hail > F. .khan. District Governor, Feature of Weekly Mtutag of the dab. An address by Harry Adams, of Ral elgh. Governor of the Carolina* Kiwanis District, and the • introduction of two new> members of the Concord club, were features of the regular meeting of the Kiwanis Club of Concord, held at the Y. M. C. A. on Friday evening at seven o'clock. George 8. Klutti and Walter L. Furr were introduced as new members by Will Foil, district trustee. 1 Jim Smith, gefcferal chairman of the l Kiwanis Minstrol (committee, reported I that rehearsals were going along nicely, and that everything will be in readiness for the big show which will be given on Mouduy night at the new High School auditorium. On account of the fact that Chautauqua opens on Tuesday, it has been decided to present the mihstrel show only one pjght. Monday. Boyd Grady, chairman of the ticket commit i tee. gave t iekets jo all Kiwaniaus pres ent. with the plea that each Kiwanian dispose of the tickets and injure the suc | cess of the undertaking. Governor Attain* was then introduced to the Kiwanian* and delivered a most . helpful and inspiring address on the principles of Kiwanis. He told his hear ers of the rapid growtti of the organiza : tion in his district, stating that the num . her of clußs.jp the two Carolina* has ] grown since January Ist from 59 to 71 ! at present, with a membership of more j than 5.3(H). .So far lie has visited 51 ! clubs in his /listriot, covering more than 9,000 miles. The big International Convention to ! be held in Denver for four days begin , uing June 13th. should be attended by a number of memhei's of the Concord club, continued the Governor, who out lined to his hearers the Sfdendid itiner | ary that has been outlined for the Ki wanans from the Carolina*, who will : travel on a special train known as th< ! Kiwanis Special. Then followed a splendid presentation of the principles ami ideals of Kiwanis hy the speaker. Service, he emphasized is the distinguishing trait of Kiwanis and. lie stressed the importance of servits to the under privileged child, a work which lias been sponsored by the I tier national organization, and in which indi vidua 1 clubs are actively engaged. Kiwanis is a modern interpretation of the golden rule in business, las purpose is to create and uphold the principles bf : right, and u code of ethics in every day business life. The motto of Kiwanis—"We Build"— continued the speaker, is carried out ii the building t)f better men and better citizens, and through this means the building of better towns and cities ovet our entire land. A vote of appreciation whs extended ti Mis- Mary Mael.auglilin. song leader for the elab. who was in charge of tin music for the last time before leavin; I for lies- home in Pennsylvania to spent ' the holidays. Mis- Dorothy Wolff fur PAINS’JN BACK Arkansas Lady Says Mother Gave Her Canto! and She Had No More Trouble of Thin Kind. Lamar, Ark.—Bln. Edith Seeman, here, recently/ made the following statement describing her experience in | the use of Cardui: “I had pain in my back and Hides; I oad sick headaches and my nose would I bleed. I couldn’t sit up at all. “My mother gave me Cardui. I took about a half bottle and at this ... I i was able to get op and help with the j work. Next time I took it again, and now, after taking two bottles, I do not i have any trouble at all at tills time. ' I gained, my skin cleared up, 1 am healthy and strong. “My mother todk Cardui for a weak, run-down condition. It did her more good for weakness and nervoesnfcsfi than any medicine she has ever taken. She took six bottles in all. We recom mend it and certbfnly know its worth.” The foregoing is one out of thou sands of statements which have been received from users of Cardui, the ! woman’s tonie. If yeu are a sufferer j from womanly ailments, try Cardui. It ! may be just whet you need. At yeur dealer’s. NC-15* BARGAINS BARGAINS ÜBED AND REBUILT ORGANS Cottage Organs / Parlor Organs ' '■ Chapel Organs. f N V , s #».ooMup. KIDD-FRIX Music and Stationery Comnanv niched the accompaniments far the songs. The kttenwhnce prize, donated by Wifl Linker, was drawn by Albert Palmer. Dr. P. K. MacFadyeu will be in charge of the meeting on June 6th. COMMENCEMENT AT SCOTIA WOMEN’S COLLEGE To Be B«N May 18-91.—Dr. Alls* to Nbtr Annual Address. Dr. T. R. Lewis, president of Scotia Women's College, has made public the ■ pragrapi of the coming commencement of that institution, witch win be held from 'Stay 18 to May 21, inefosive. It is as follows: Baccalaureate sermon. Sabbath, May 18th, 4 p. m. Senior Preparatory Entertainment, Monday. May 19tb, 7 p. m. Class Day Exercises, Tuesday, May 20, 1:80 p. m. Annual Address, Tuesday evening, Mar 20, T:3o—Rev. R. H. Allen, D. D. Pitts burgh, Pa. Commencement Etereißea, Wednesday, May 21, 10 a. m. Unveiling of Tablet in memory of Dr. A. W. Vefner, 19 M. The following program will be ren ds ml on Wednesday morning, May 21, at 10 o’clock: March —Hongroisc tie Concert —H. Ko walski. Invocation. Chorus: (a) A Blue Bird—Spencer; (b) The Maybell and the Flowers —Men- delssohn. ’ Essay: Epochs in English Literature— EUcn Armstrong. Essay: Sources of the Nation’s Wealth —Corrie Hart. , Scmi-Shorus: Snowflakes Corvcn- Gaul. , Essay: Where There Is Vision the People Live—Blanche Taylor. Essay: Education Os the Illiterate Masses—Rebecca Pattersou. Piano Solo: Sonata No. 4, 1> Major— Hayden—Luveniu Bell. Essay : Radio—Doris Dungec. Essay : American Highways—Goldie Sanders. Chorus: In Heavenly Love Abiding—v Pike. Presentation of Diplomas and Certifi cates. Chorus: O Lovely Night—Offcubach- Speeker. Benediction. At The Theatres. William S. Hart, one of the most pop-' ular of the screen stars, is being offered at the Star today in a western feature. “The Silent Stranger,” a drama, and a big Christie comedy, make up the pro gram today at tile Pastime. Franklyu Farmtm plays the leading role in the western drama. “The Two- Fisted Tenderfoot," at tlie Piedmont to day. A law school for Chinese women lias been established in Shanghai as a step toward the emancipation of Chinese women. The school is the lirst of its kind in China. Every mother knows the nameless dread that comes whenever the little one turns np feverish, listless and with out appetite. Always the same anxiety, the fearful question—is it going to be scarlet fe ver, diphtheria or some other danger ous, contagious disease? , Event mother knows that a laxative is the first thing required, but too often the ordinary laxative fails to do a thor ough job because it has not sufficient action on the liver. , Liv-o-lax meets the need because, be sides cleansing the stomach and bow els, ft clears out congested fiver and so brings quicker relief i Children love to take Liv-o-lax be cause it tastes good and does good. It is made only of pure vegetable in gredients, is not at all drastic and causes no distress. You can get Liv-o-lax, 30c, at yottt Inorile drug More. PHONE 1808 4. t, ■ ' MML ■ If ITS BARGAINS YOU ARE LOOKING FOR YOU CAN GET IT AT PARKS - BELK CO. EVERY DAY IS BARGAIN DAY WE SELL FOR LESS PHONE 138 Saturday, May 17, 1924
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 17, 1924, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75