Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / July 8, 1924, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAGE EIGHT Cone on % what.- »\ oW roan, * sA>m? THE FIRST COST— Os an inferior refrigerator is small, but how about the ice bills you will have to pay every rummer. Buying a refrigerator is. like buying an au tomobile. Not so rauek the original cost, but the upkeep, with an in ferior refrigerator, poorly insulated and ill fitting doors, you will waste enough ice in one or two summers to pay for a good refrigerator. This is Refrigerator weather, and our tsock of Baldwins and Auto matics is going fast. See these refrigerators and ice boxes before you buy. Terms if you like. Concord Furniture Co. THE RELIABLE FURNITURE STORE FISHER’S On Sale Saturday, July 12th A Regular 75c Box of Mignonette Face • Powder for Ask salesladies for Coupon and clip Coupon from papers. Be on hand Sat urday and take advantage of this Wonder ful Opportunity to buy this Unusual Face Powder in this First Sale at the small price of 29c per box This Coupon Is Worth to You 46c NOTICE TO AUTHORIZED DISTRIBUTORS P o " r r ' In accordance with our agreement you regular 75c i*g. are authorized to deliver one package Mignonette Face Powder MIGNONETTE FACE POWDER as advertised our regular 75e. size, on presentation of Coupon redeem this Coupon, signed, and 29 cents “ ble at , om ; e aml _ , , ’ * s good only un , Present at once, before supply is exhausted at til authorized JULIUS FISHER CO. distribution is exhausted. Customer must sign here Address No Coupons Accepted After Hose of Sale HHBBumMimraiiiiiii u — * ■ > ,u:i. MASON JAR CAPS * JARS, RUBBERS At the best, Canning Time brings many hours of hard work, and if ou can get utencils to lighten your labors it is well worth while. Here are some handy items you will find here: ,• / Fruit Jars —Pints, Quarts, Half Gallons. Jar Caps. Jar Rubbers. Ritchie Hardware Co YOUR HARDWARE STORE PHONE 117 PHONE 117 COAL A splendid lump coal at $7.75 Best Doubled Screened Jellico ss’7s Steam Coal from $5.00 to $6.50 I sell for less because I sell for cash. Coal buckets free to customers. f I will thank yotf for your order. ■ A. B. POUNDS Car Washing and Polishing Our Specialty ; HOWARD’S FILLING STATION “SERVICE WITH A SMILE” THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Hie Concord Daily Tribune' TIME OF CLOSING OF MAILS* j The time of the closing of mail* at 1 the Concord postofflee is aa follows: Northbound Train No. 44-11:00 p. m. Train No. 36—10:00 a. m. Train No. 12— 6:30 p. ax Train No. 38— 7;30 p. m. Train No. 30—11:00 p. m. Bonlhlunmd Train No. 37 9:00 a. m. Traih No. 45 3:00 p. m. Train No. 138— 9:00 p. m. Train No. 29—11:00 p. m. LOCAL MENTION Cotton on the local market today is quoted at 28 1-2 cents per pound. Mrs. W. F. Goodman entered the Con cord Hospital this morning for treat ment. The condition of little Miss Willene Swink. who underwent an operation Monday for the removal of her tonsils is improving nicely. Mrs. Vic Widenhouse and children have returned to their home after spend ing several days with her sister, Mrs. Zeb Joyner, of York, S. C. Tlie condition of Mrs. J. A. Praether, who uuderwent an o|>eration last week for the removal of her tonsils, is reported <ts improving very satisfactory now. Marriage license has been issued by Register of Deeds Elliott tot Robert Lee Wilkinson and Miss Eursley Lee Swain, both of Kannapolis. Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Gibson are now living in their new home on South Union Street, having moved into the handsome new home several day* ago. The weekly meeting of the Concord Rotary Club will be held at the Y. M. C. A. tomorrow at 12:30 p. ui. Presi dent Hartsell will preside at the meet ing. It was announced Monday by an offi cer of the organization that the War Mothers meeting scheduled at first for this week has been postponed until next week. The meeting will be held next Tuesday. July 15th. Frank Crowell, who managed the two King Tut service stations before they recently were purchased by the Standard Oil Co., will continue in the same posi tion with the new owners of the sta tions. Many expressions of regret wer£ heard here today over the death of Calvin Coolidge, Jr. The fortune of the yonth was closely watched as he fought a los ing fight against the fatal poison, and deep sympathy was expressed for the bereaved parents when it was learned the youth was dead. Members of the executive committee of the American Legion will meet to night nt 8 o'clock. At the meeting the committee members will decide on an ex pert to be engaged for several months in filling out the bonus applications for former service men of the county. The expenses of the expert will be paid from money donated by the city and county, each having given $l5O. Judging from remarks heard on the streets here today many Concord people were awakened about the same time this 'morning. This is due to the terrible crash of thunder which followed a vivid flash of lightning about 6:20 o'lockthis morning during an early morning thun der storm. A heavy rain accompanied the thunder and lightning, which contin ued about an hour. The following new books are at the library now: “Pollyana of the Orange Blossoms", by Smith, “Deep in the Hearts of Men", by Waller, “The Black Hood", by Dixon. "Pandora Lifts the Lid", by Christopher Morley and Don Marquis, "Brood of the Witch Queen”, by Rohmer. Also three of Mr. Nor. man’s books. Mrs. Reed reported that more books were lent Saturday than any day in the past eight months. Twenty defendants were tried in re corder’s court here Monday and nine teen of them paid fines and costs totall ing $245.70. The other defendant was charged with larceny in two counts and was sentenced to serve four months on the county chain gang. The docket for court Monday was unusually heavy, com pared with those of the past several weeks when very few cases have been tried. Only two matters not of a routine nature were presented to the county commissioners. One was selection of jurors to serve the third week of Cabar rus court in August and the other was a request for $l5O to help the American Legion get bonus blanks for former serv ice men filled out. The board granted the request of the Legion and selected the jurors, which can be found in an other column of this paper. Dr. S. E. Buchanan, county health of ficer, declared this morning that the county-wide typhoid fever campaign got off to a good start Monday. Mr. Buch anan and an assistant visited each of the scheduled places Monday and at each a number of persons were vaccinated against the disease. The program willi be carried out just as announced through- 1 ! out the campaign so long as enough in-1 terest is maintained' tot warrant it, Dr. I Buchanan has declared. Uae of Irish Language Protested la ! Inland. Dublin. July B.—Senator William ' Butler Yeats, the poet, spoke recently in ' the Senate against a bill which would \ compel railway companies tto print their i tickets and time tables in Irish. “I have tried to learn Gaelic but ] failed,” he confessed. ‘'l have failed to i learn any language except English, I ' am sorry to say.” Other Senators, referring to proposals 1 to print whiskey labels in Irish, said 80 per cent of the population would not be able to read them. W. O. ff, NOTICE. Regular meeting of Elm Camp No. 16 W. O. W. Tuesday evening at 8:00 o’clock in the Moose Lodge Boom. Every member is urged to be present. w. r. fisher, o. a B. C. LITAKER. Clerk. S7SA ; Sbyr Some men stay away so much that when they do eat at home they look for the menu. • • • No Fourth of July Is complett without somebody calling our flat "The colors that never run.” * • • Every auto accident is caused b) Jay walkers or Jay drivers. • • • We have our upe and downs At optimist looks forward to the upj and a pessimist to the downs. • • • Justice is blind, but most of at think we are eye doctors. * * * Some college has been giving th» thermometer a few honorary degree* • • • Men are known by the company they keep; women by the clothes they keep on wearing. • • • June Ib gone and those who man aged to stay single through it are fairly safe for another 11 months. • * * Collectors usually haunt a man when the ghost walks at the office. • • * A common do* Is the safest watch dog. Get a good dog and some bur sar is liable toMteal him. • • • No matter how old a gas meter gets. It .is always anxious to run. • • • The demand for people who are polite exceeds the supply. • • • • Too many tired business men work themselves into heart failure trying to avoid buslneas failure. DESIRE UNNAMED MAN AS NOMINEE But Delegates Don’t Know Who He Is; Prefer Both Smith and McAdoo Out. Murk Srfllivan in Raleigh News and Observer. New York. June 7. —That episode of the request from Smith manager that he be permitted to addrees the conven tion was interpreted by most of us with a good deal of confidence, as meaning that Smith must have intended to offer to withdraw if McAdoo would with draw. Smith could only have done two things, namely: make a stump speech commend ing himself highly for the Presidency, or else offer to withdraw provided Mc- Adoo would do the same. Obviously, Smith has too much humor to do the former, and so we were obliged to infer he meant to do the latter. If Smith had made this offer and backed it up with an attractive person ality, and with words of conciliation, compromise and encouragement to par ty —in that case it would have been “put up to” MAdoo firetty strong. Probably more than half the delegates would like to have both Candidates out of the race. More than half would prefer some third candidate, though they may not agree oa just who the third candidate is. * McAdoo Stronger Than Smith. j As between McAdoo and Smith. Mc- Adoo is clearly the stronger. If all the other candidates were out of the race, and if the convention were to vote on Smith and McAdoo and those two only, McAdoo would get about 620 dele gates and SnCith about 479. That would give a majority to Mc- Adoo, but considerably short of the nec essary two-thirds. Smith, with hihs fol lowing, or to state it more broadly, the anri-MeAdoo group—has more than the third neecssaty to veto McAdoo's nomi nation. So- long as Smith stays in, McAdoo can't win. At least that is the situation so long as the Smith dele gates stick. It is an endurance contest, in which the delegates do most of the enduring, and do it in those narrow little kitchen' chairs, of which the seat ing capacity of the hall is made’ up. The psychological attitude of the Mc- Adoo group is one of demanding victory, of demanding the nomination and all that pertains thereto for William G. McAdoo. When they say they aren’t thinking of a compromise they mean it. They want the nomination; they think their candidate is the strongest one; they CONCORD COTTON MARKET TUESDAY, JULY 8, IM4 Cotton I .28 1-2 Cotton seed M Quaker Chiffon Silk Hose FULL FASHIONED THROUGHOUT ONE PRICE, $1.85 Quaker Hose is by far tbe best value that we have been able to offer. They come in all the seasoa’s popular shades and black and white in both Chiffon and Regular weight. Dorothy Dickson, leading lady of the Palais Royal has proved that Quaker Hosiery will show ten miles of dancing and show never a sign of wear. ) ... , ' ■ \M'" think this entitles them to the nojning tion, and they pro)io*te to have it if they have to stick around all summer. Ideal Candidate Unidentified It is a fact that MoAdoo has more delegates than any other one candidate. And yet it is safe to say that nearer half the convention would prefer some ether candidate. But the name of that other candidate ie "X,” and the nature of him is a kind of composite ideal. Ap parently “X” is net any one of the minor candidates or elae the convention would have gone ahead and named him long ago. In the lack of a definite candi date rather than a composite “X” the convention adjourned with McAdoo fur ther in the lead than ever before. One of the main reasons why many of the delegates had begun to wish there were some other candidate available in stead of McAdoo. was the feeling put in words over and over again, that after all this hauling and' mauling the nomi nation wouldn't be worth much to either of the two main candidates woh engaged in the mauling. But this does not necessarily follow. A few weeks after the convention is over, no one pays any attention to- hpw it was gotten; always provided, of course, that there was noth ing dishonorable in the getting of it. Interest will center in the candidate in the issues. -McAdoo needn's heetitate to grasp the nomination of he can. An’d that seems most certainly his intention. Obviously Smith isn't the man to beat McAdoo with. On the contrny, it is the fact that the nnti-MAdoo profession al leaders chose Smith to beat McAdpp with-it is this—and the taatica they adopted that has cemented the loyalty of McAdoo’s western and southern fol lowers and made thiin strong. Aa to finding some one else to beat him with,- all that is tip to the delegates. At The Theatres. “The Blizzard,” the Fox feature, is be ing offered again today at the Piedmont with an nli-star cast. At the Star today Gloria Swanson is being offered in “The Humming Bird,” one of her latest pictures. "Conductor 1!124," a Johnny Hines comedy, is the attraction again today at the Pastime. ! | A big selection makes ! I Ji choosing easy—makes you X i[ will recognize for reputation ]|| |; of accuracy and dependabil- '| j! ity—put one on your arm ! ! today. ; *ii|f ; jj / ! 11 STARNES-MILLER- ! PARKER CO. j! Jewelers and Optometrists ft \ lh DISK ASK REMEDIES rtf cy Salve and Soap),fail in I U 17 tha treatment of Itch. Eczema. \ I'i fUngwarm. Tetter or other itoh fa* akin dieeaeee. Trr thle treatment at our rfak. »H*uwra ouaraS°tred BKXN^I)IBSASK to*7hfa- djz.eeee. Try thlel treatment m ear risk. PEARL DRUG COMPANY “On the Square” HOOVER’S INC. Underwear for Discriminating Men Cool, Comfortable, Sheer /J § \i n< te rwear in Mansco, Allen \ U A:, Wilson Bros, and Country i Solid comfort lies in the fit. et US T ou w ' t^l t^ e differ- H(T '-ggßKjf en t rnodels, styled for different HOOVER’S, Inc. THE YOUNG MEN’S STORE Beginning Tuesday, July Ist ALL MILLINERY AT ONE-HALF PRICE For Ten Days SPECIALTY HAT SHOP For Economical Transportation CHEVROLETS DO COST LESS By the Mile It is the lowest priced fully equipped automobile on the market, nothing to buy excfe£t your license. Silent, simple and powerful, the Chevrolet has made good. It has long since past the experimental stages and is giving real, proven value for your money. Balloon and seihi-balloon tires, optional. MOTOR & TIRE SERVICE CO. Chevrolet Dealers Chevrolet Dealers—Concord—Service is Mack’s Hobby CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Oometod Weekly by CUfae A Moo*.) latum named represent priced said j* findnee on the market: Effi 05 Butter 26 ouatry Hem <>k Ofonfay Shoulder ...» JUJ ® mntr 7 SMee ..a...JJB Young chickens _25 fey** it httb Potato** ... Onion* sl.OO Peaa 2jOC Reliable Drugs and Sundries •You wait the utmost in service, quality and value when you pur chase drugs or kindred supplies. That’s what you get here, com bined with an unusually largo col lection of needs such as toilet ar ticles, choice candies, attractive stationery and smokers’ supplies. Cabarrus Drug Co.' PHONE M Tuesday, Jyly 8, 1924 Keep Cool by Using ELECTRIC FANS We Have a Shipment \ Just in Ritchie Caldwell Company, Inc. SPECIAL 51, Cents Buys Two 50 Cent Bottles of CARO-CO SHAMPOO Get Yours quick. Do not miss this opportunity. . Clines Pharmacy telephone m
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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July 8, 1924, edition 1
8
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