Tuesday^July 22, 1924 I NEWS l (By the AmmliM Flu.) (By Courtesy of Radio Digest) Program For Tuesday, July 22. ■\yXIAQ, Chicago News (447.5) 5 or gan; 5:30 orchestra: (i literary talk: 7:40 French lessons; 8 civil service: 8:15 pi ano. WI.S, Chicago (345) 5:30-9 orchestra, music, farm talks:; 10 “A Day at School": 11:30 music. KTW. Chicago (530) 6 concert; 7 farm program ; 7:45-S :30 musical; 9- 10:30 ‘At Home." WQJ, Chicago (448) 0 talk; Cam bridge Sisters; 9-1 a. m„ orchestra, talk, music. WOR. Buffalo (319) 4:30-5:30 music. WLW, Cincinnati (423) 7 American legion minstrels; 10:55 orchestra. WJAX, Cleveland News (.'190) 6:30 bedtime: 7 concert. W-FAA. Dalas News (476) 8:30-9:30 band; 11-12 music. WWJ, Detroit News (417) 6 News or chestra: 6:30 band. WTAR, Elgin (286) 7:30-12:30 dance, artists. WDAF, Kansas City Star (411) 3:30- 4:30 trio: 5 child talent; 6-7 School of the Air; 11:45 Night hawks. WHB, Kansas ity (411) 8 vocal, in strumental; 10:30-11:30 dance, i KHJ. Los Angeles (395) 8 concert; 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 ! I Special Sale All This Week Includes all Oxfords and Strap Pumps in Satins, Suedes i J and all Leathers in the most desirable styles for the season i i PRICES $1.98 TO $5.95 PARKER’S SHOE STORE WHERE YOU SAVE ooooooooooooooooooooooooooopooooooooooooooooooooooooo ; I A Motor Trip business or pleasure, 7 j \ demands protection. i | JOHN K. PATTERSON & CO. jj “Consult Your Agent as You Would Your Lawyer or Doctor” •oooooooooooooooooopooooooooooooooooooooooooooonooooff I s Fresh Country Vegetables Every | x Green Corn, Tomatoes, Green Beans, Potatoes, Etc. Try our choice Cuts of Fresh Meats with your order, j j PHONE 686 | | Sanitary Grocery Co. “A REAL GOOD PLACE TO TRADE” j | OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO What KELVINATOR Is and Does § | KELVINATOR la the name of an electrical refrigerating unit that ' ' i fIU right into the ice box you now have, and eliminates forevermore the ! ! ] | inconvenience and inefficiency of ice-cooled refrigeration. It maintains a dry, unvarying atmosphere in your refrigerator at 11 ' > nil times. It maintains a certain predetermined temperature and requires no iji i attention whatsoever, after its installation. 1 It produces a temperature considerably lower than that produced ! ! [ -hT ice. ij, i i It freezes crystal clear cubes of ice for the table or the sick room. ' | It is a model of cleanliness and sanitation. It saves labor, food!; an- , i i noyance and money. It costs less than ice to operate, and its first cost 11 is not a burden. It is operating successfully in more than 40,000 homes, ) j ] nine of these in Concord. Ask for the names of those using them. Phooe 108 and 127 J. Y. PHARR A BROTHER PBOOOOOOeOOOOOOOeoOOOOOQCXinftnnftnnnnnnoooowooCiOOOOOOfi? (Car Washing, Polishing, Alemite g Greasing and Crank Case Service. | Texaco Gasoline, Oils and Greases. | Tires, Tubes and Accessories are our S specialties. Letusgetyour car in good condi- jj tion to take your vacation. . \ 8:45 children; 10 vocal, electure; 12 dawc. WIIAS, Cotiricr-Journal Louisville Times (400) 7:30-0 Hawaiian trio. WCI Medford (360) 5:30 talk: 5:45 musical. WMC, Memphis Comitereial-Appeal (500) 8:30 program; 11 frolic. WLAG, Minnenpolis-St. Paul (417) 7:30 lectures. CKAC. Montreal (425) 5:30 orchestra: C :30 variety ; 8:30 dance. WEAF, New York (492) 9 a. m. edu cational; 3-7 p. m. children, orchestra. WHN, New York (366 ) 78 m. State Theatre; 2-10 orchestras. WOR, Newark (405) 4-5:30 children. WTAY, Oak Park, 283) orchestra; tenor, story; 8 feature program. KGO, Oakland (312) W musical; 12- 3 a. m. orchestra. < WOAW, fun aha (526 ) 6 dinner hour; 6:30 program ; 9 concert. WI)AR, Philadelphia (395) 5:30 talk. ,Ay FI, Philadelphia. (395) 4:30 orches tra : 5 talk. Wll*. Philadelphia (509) 4:05 orches tra ; 5 talk ; 6 orchestra ; 0 :50 band ; 8- 9 :05 dance. KDKA. Pittsburgh (326 ) 7 quartet. Hawaiian orchestra; 9 concert. I WCAE, Pithsbnrgb (462 ) 5:30 con- ] cert; 8:30 musical. { BILL BOOSTER SAYS . THING'. \ GO TO OH «OM Ohti \ rr oonpt hoot me none, n PVJEASEE THE WIFE AMD VT J HELPS KEEP THE CHURCH GOING \ VUHATVOMDOF A TOMJN VWOULD THIE 98 VIIVTH* \xs churches? oiArtej ! READ j 11 Chattooga Griffin i; 1 1 ! * jl l A New and Beautiful Love ! I * | Story by Our Own ] 1 Fellow Citizen ij| V. L. NORMAN | | We have just received | i from the publisher a limited ' [ j! number of thjs new book. ! ! ] Phone us your order. ] [ Musette,fac. So—POßßGffißffyypoooDopoot* .-! • - , Choice Roasts Native Spring Lamb Veal J. F. Dayvault & Bro. Phones 86 and 524 I Guaranteed Armature j Rewinding Reasonable Prices Repairs All Kinds of Generator w THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE f COUNTRYJH LOkRESPONDENCB r No. vine Township. I Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Baugh and fam ily spent Sunday In MooresviUe with Mrs. Baugh’s brother, George Br»t. Miss Lucille Layton is spending the week with her sister, Mrs. John Joyner, of No. 10 township. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Lewis spent Sun day at Mr. Gibson Smith’s. Mr. and Mrs. Mack Allman and fam ily spent Sunday 4t Martin Pleas’. A large crowd of relatives and friends gathered at the home of W. F. Layton Sunday to celebrate Mrs. Lula Joyner’s birthday. We wish her many more such happy birthdays. FAITH. On Sunday, July 13th, two of the Sunday school roomfl were occupied for the first lime. T'p in the second story of the new Reformed Church the room on the south side next to Dr. Brown’s home -was occupied by Mrs. Leo Peeler, the teacher. Here is the names of her -scholars, all girls about nine to thirteen years old: Hazel .Tones. Leola Gardner, Gladys Peeler, Edith Ilolshoußer, Leona Misenheimer, Bertha Barringer, Alma Holshouser, Helen McCombs, Arlene Davis. Dorothy Peeler. Lois Peeler, Dor othy Barringer and. Lola Lyerly. There were fourteen in this class. The other room on the north side just at the head of the stairway, was occupied by O. ;W- Gardner's class. The names of his class follow: Herman Lyerly, Harold Byrd, Alex Peeler, Allen Shive, Earl Shive, Harold Misenheimer, Marvin Davis, Har ry Peeley, Kell Holler, Earl Holler and Allen MeCombsr, all about ten to thir teen years old. L. M. Peeler was the teaeher of a icln*: in the basement of the new church Sunday, July 13th, The names of the ■children in his class follow Elmer Misen- Ihelmcr, Harry Jones Peeler, James Basinger. Trever Jones, Owen Jones, Fred Shive, John Shive. Welker Fraley, Hall Lyerly, David Lyerly and Delmey Fraley. Several other classes were ih the main part of the church. Tom Byrd is the superinteiilent. Some,, girl at Norwood has just sent us a long Leap Year letter. She lays down the leap year laws to us and says the law we must obey. It is too long for our items. ( Mr. Carhart. of Kannnapolis, a young bc.v, is now with M. L. Gant plumbing shop. He spent July the 4th iu Wash ington. D. C. In The Concord Daily Tribune of July 12th, page six and the upper part of the sixth and seventh columns is an article that strikes Venus exactly—a picture of n man with a young couple in front of him getting married. Look it up and read it. That would be the way to do. Then we would have t lie best country .in the world. Seantift George R. TTzzeU and Col. Z. Vance Aiisjin nd have returned from an extended (rip through Wilmington and the eastern part of the state. .T. K. Deadmon has returned from the Thomasville picnic. Thp excursion was run by Rev. Ms. ljlark, of Gastonia, for the Baptist Sunday School to the or phans’ borne. Five hundred children •are in the home and well eared for. Mr. Deadmon saw them milk the .cows by electricity and report*! a fine time. A. A. Bfaver, of Rockwell, was In Faith today 1 with a load of his milk in little bottles for the merchants of Faith. It sells this hot weather like hot cakes. At Knney's store here they have a young fox in a big box. Some boys found it in a dry well on top of the old Philips mountain now owned by' Peeleng. They come to Faith and got the long ladder from the painters here, and let it down iu the well and got the fox. They will keep it a while and then have a big race with it. They think the fox was in the well about a week before it was found. The race will be when it gets rested up. G. L. Lipo, C. J. Freeze and Rev. J. S. Wessingpr, of China. Grove, of the community of Mt. Moriah, B. L. Church, motored to Faith to see and inspect the new Reformed Church building here that is built out of Rowan county granite, and is one of the finest churches of the kind to be .fpiind anywhere outside of the big cities' in the United States. People come h(jt?e in cars from far and near tojiee this new church with a view of building one like it. It seems that everybody in the United States knows Venus, and all the post office clerks know us because we got an envelope today directed this way: Venus, Faith, N. C., with some used carbon THIS WOMAN’S MARVELLOUS :J BECOVEBT All Due to Lydia E. Pink ble Compound It— \. 1 -“I was badly run t my side and back; sontetimes I could hardly move around in bed. My husband got me Lydia E-Pink nata’g Vegetable Compound, and af ter taking it I was so much better I could doallmy work again. I do my housework, have a garden, raise chickens, and in har vest time I worked in the field and. metimes I do chores the Vegetable Com pound before and after my four-months old baby was born, and it baa always helped me wonderfully. I believe there is no better medicine made for women, and I hope every woman will give it a fair trial.”—Mrs. Aootnrr R. Wieder hoft, R. No. 2, Box 84, Truman, Mhm. Women goffering from troubles so common to their sex should give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound • fair trial. * ■2ebytirugg&ewySLiT"' paper in it, but no letter. Mi*. John A. Peeler is confined to] her home. We went to a new section of the county to visit a strange family of good, well-to-do people, and when they found out who we were, they had us to stay with them two days iind nights and their neighbors came to hear us talk, be cause we could entertain them so nicely. These neighbors said send me to their homes to spend a few nights. They wanted to be entertained by Venus. While we were getting ready to leave we woke up and found it all a dream, last night. VENUS. FAITH. Mr. and Mrs. Love Wyatt’s little nine year-old daughter is in the Salisbury Hospital and has been operated upon for appendicitis and is getting along fine. Carlton and Price, the two fine young lawyers of Salisbury, will have their of fice in the third story of the new city hall near the new court house when it is built. Miss *Garrell Raney, of Salisbury, is visiting her cousin, Mies Carrie Bell Gardner, at Faith. VENUS. FAITH. Mis,.es Callie and Clea Barger, of Kan napolis. spent the week-end with Mrs. G. C. Miller. Rev. and >lrs. H. A.,Fesperman spent Friday night here with Mrs. Fesnerman's mother. Mrs.. Set tie Peeler. Thfcy aye 1 on their way to Newton to attend the summer conference of the Reformed 'Church. Mrs. R. L. Brown, of Christiana, is visiting her daughter here, Mrs. Settie Peeler. Mr. T. R. Lingle had his first ripe cnntaloupes from his garden July 19th. If you can beat that trot them out. The Fisher Reunion and Association will be held at Faith in the New Re formed Church Julyl 31st, 1024, begin ning at 10 o’clock. We have just received n letter reading as follows: Dear Venus: Have you any cotton blossoms and bolls yet? Mr, Smith has cotton blossoms and bolls. If yow cap beat t,hgt trot out your cotton. I am 11 years old and am in the eleventh’ grade. If you can beat that trot them Kannapolis, N. C., July 18tb, 1924. We are having rain here today, July 19th, Saturday and it has turned some cooler. i The peach and damson trees are being propped to keep them from breaking with fruit. John and I.ige Kuykendall came in home from Durham to spend a few days. They are. buildiag a fine large granite ehureh in Durham They are doing the stone mason work. They came in their fine car. When they finish this job there is another church waiting for them. An other congregation is going to have a granite church built. So Faith is not the only place where the Kuykendall brothers are building fine granite church es. They are fine stone masons. Mr. j. M. Hipp, one of the good old Rowau county farmers of near Organ church, passed through Faith Friday on his way to Salisbury with a wogan load of good to eat. Here is what he , showed via: Apples, large heads pf cab bage, roasting ears, plums, and cucum bers. All were raised on his farm 'this year. If you can beat that trot oht your produce. We are going down to take Fruit Jars, All Sizes Fruit Cans, Pints and Quarts Col-Pak Canners For Sale i j The New Hardware Store i Ritchie Caldwell Company, Inc. Hot Rolls 4 to 7 p. m. No Deliveries and Retail Only 15c Per Dozen Concord Steam Bak er^ 80 W. Corbin St. | dinner with him some time, i Mrs. Will Ritchie and children are spending some time with her mother" in Davie county. Our name has got into some of the pa- i pers up north where they issue them by ; the millions and now we are getting swamped with letters from all over the United States. They all want something , or to know something. We will have to get a typewriting machine and a young lady to operate it if they keep on coming at the present rate. Today we received letters from the following places: Oak Ridge, La.; Lorain, Ohio,; Portland, Ore., Marion. Ohio, Ellicott City, Md.; Rocky Ford, Col,; Kannapolis, China Grove, N. C.; Boscobel, Wi>., and Chicago, 111. The papers that Venus writes for have a wonderful circulation and are read all over the United States and in other ! countries. VENUS. CENTER GROVE. On last Friday night, July IBth, a watermelon feast was given in honor of Miss Pauline Cole, of Durham, who is visiting her' sister, Mrs. K. M. Cook, of Concord. The folks gathered about 8 o’clock at the pretty country home at- Mrs. E. jM. Cook. We played games*' fit various kinds, told stries, etc. Then we were invited to a long table which was filled wath watermelon slices. We all ate and enjoyed the feast to the fullest. Those who were present were: Misses Hama, Mita, Rebecca and Vertie Cas tor, Margaret Thim and Mildred Hileman Emma SBostiaii, Helen Cook, Helen Smith, Jaunita and Kathleen Smith, of Concord; Pauline Cole, of Durham; Alessres. William Fnicher, B. D. and Smoot Castor, Marium and James Cook, Gilbert Bostian, Leonard Sutber and Bill Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. R. M., C. 8., and T. H. Cook and little‘Ruby, Eunice and Robert Cook, of Concord; Mr,, and Mrs. E. M, Copk .and Eugene Clayton; if Asheville. Everybody reported a nlSe timti' a u*l bid each and- all "adieu. 'Mis Pauline Cole spent Saturday night with Miss Rebecca Castor. j Always buy poultry feeds in Checkerboard Bags. / The checkerboard represents twenty-seven years’ ;!; experience in the science of balancing a ration. ! ! That’s why you are guaranteed more eggs or money ; j back when you feed Purina Chicken Chowder with i ] CASH FEED STORE Phone 122 S. Church St. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOPOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO I CONSTANTLY IMPROVED Rut No Yearly Models There are obvious benefits to the purchaser in Dodge Brothers policy of •' ' making constant, gradual refinements iu their product instead of cliang- I ! ing from one desigh to another year after year. Chief among these is the faet th at the car may be operated throughout 1 ' the full limit of its' usefulness without the extra depreciation loss which ! ' results from a rapid succession of radically different models. Corl Motor Co. I West Depot Street Phone 630 x STORAGE REPAIRS | THAT'S FINE WORK ]i [ We hear expressions of appreciation from ev«ry woman for whom '! | ] 1 1. we do work, and It simply opnrs ns on to greater perfection. Dry Cleaning b not a luxury but a real economy—it removes the O ' ] dirt and grease; destroys the moth eggs and disease germs—preserves 8 the color and restores the nap without harm to the fabric. | 1 I Bob’s Dry Cleaning Co. 1 ”OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOPOOOOOOOOOOOPOOOnOfIOOOOOu udf PAGE THREE W. A. Castor and Harry Hileman mo tored to Charlotte Sunday, July 20th, to see Mrs. W*. A. Castor, who is in the Presbyterian Hospital. We are glad to say that she is getting along splendidly and will be able to return home the latter part of his week, we hope. Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Cook, of Con cord, spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. W. A. Castor. Miss Maggie Lou Castor is spending a while with Mrs'. D. B. Castor. Joe Castor, who is taking a business course at King's Business College in < Charlotte, spent the week-end with home folks. Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Sloop, of Kan napolis, Mr. and Mrs. ,T. V. Wiggington and Victor, Jr., of California, spent Sunday, July 20th, with Mr. and Mrs.. D. B. Castor. Grady Ross spent Sunday, July 20th, at Monroe with home folks. Children's Day at Center Grove was a complete success. A large audience witnessed the splendid program rendered by the children, after which Rev. Mi; Browa made a very impressive talk. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Shinn and little son, of Salisbury, spent Saturday night and Sunday, with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Shinn, msr'Kannapolis. Misses Helen and Rebecca Cook will leave Tuesday the 22nd, as delegates to the Sunday School Convention at Hick ory. >. ; Miss Vertie Castor spent Friday, July 18th, with Miss Hama Castor. Mrs. C. H. Castor and daughter, Miss. Hama, spent Saturday afternoon in Kan napolis on business. The Luther League, of Center Grove held a fine meeting Sunday afternoon, July 20th. Ross Cater, who was the leader, had a fine program. We have changed our time of meeting from 3 o'clock in the afternoon to 6 o’clock in the evening. Don't forget the club meeting at Mrs. W. F. Eddleman's home Friday, July 25th, ladies, young and old. BUISY B.