PAGE SIX >OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOO< | 9lobc?Ksisfet(& Seettenat Bookcases | CONCOF D FURNITURE CO. | 4 THE RELIABLE FURNITURE STORE § THIS CHRISTMAS | “SAY IT WITH FURNITURE” k-OOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOCGOOOOOOOOOOOCXXXXXXXSOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Join Us in HELPING TO BOOST THE HOTEL CONCORD NEEDS S Ritchie Hardware Co YOUR HARDWARE STORE PHONE 117 PHONE 117 I OQOOOOOOQOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOOObOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOC THE NEWEST OF THE NEW I Coats | It Pays to Trade at AT FISHER’S NOTICE j TO AUTOMOBILE OWNERS—THIS MEANS YOU! Does your Car steer hard, and is it grinding off the tread of your tires? If so, you can run dowffi to J. C. I Blume’s Garage and have them properly adjuatedsand your j car will steer like a new one. We don’t guess aE*tis'. We § act. Give us a trial. I We have Flint, Durant and Star Cars in stock. One of i these with Balloon Tires and Four Wheel Brakes would | make you a fine little car. Get a demonstration and ou will be satisfied. L J. C. BLUME’S GARAGE ■ FANCY DRY GOODS ’ WOUKN'S WEAK / X It Pay* to Put an AA in The Tribune ' 209&fffe -,' liSHOTOT -■ ' -A" ■;'. V " f-i.,.7: •.'>.'■*:•••■ _ «*3ss •; THfe CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE *°® The Concord Daily Tribune 5 TIME of closing of mails. 9 The time of the closing of mails at ,p the Concord postoffice is as follows: 0 , Northbound 9 Train No. 34—3:45 p. m. 6 Train No. 44—11:00 p. m. 2 Train No. 3ft—10:00 a. m. X Train No. 38—0 p. m. O Train No. 30—11:00 p. ml Southbound g Train No. 87— 9:00 a. m. Q Train No. 45—3:45 p. m. 0 j Train No. 135 9:00 p. m. 5 Train No. 29—11:00 p. m. j LOCAL MENTION ]i X Five cases of ehiekenpox were reported O t 0 the county health department this C morning. i ( C The condition of.J. 8. Rimer, Jr., who : S lias been ill at his home on Academy . J street, is improving. O M. 1,. Buchanan, son of Dr. and Mre. ! O S. E. Buchanan, is confined to his home . X on South I'nion Street with an attack 8 of chicken pox. p Miss Ethel Williams, teacher in the t 0 county schools, underwent an operation 1 g in the Charlotte Sanatorium this morn s' mg. p William 1,. Linker has resigned his po -2 sition with ihV Kannapolis bakery and X has bought in stock in the Concord Cash O Feed Store. )G Mr. and Mrs. ('. \W. Eudy have sold their home on Tribune street, and are gg moving to Albemarle this week, where I they will make their future home. John M. Oglesby was able to be at his office again today after being con fined at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Sherrill for the past week by ill ness. All members of the American Legion Auxiliary are invited to attend the meet ing to be held this evening at 7 :30 with Mrs. W. I). Pemberton at her home on North Union street. Father and son banquet tickets will be on sale at tike Gibson. Drug Store. Pearl Drug Store and Cline’s Pharmacy, and also the Hi-Y boys and girls will sell tickets. Any men who do not have sons and would like to help some boys get to the father and son banquet, if they will leave the tickets at the 1\ M. C. A., they will be properly distributed. According to a deed filed Saturday at the court house John A. Cosby has sold I to Mrs. Maggie Faggart Thompson prop • erty on Franklin Avenue, the purchase price being given in the deed as $2,000. The condition of Mrs. E. C. Rarnhardt, Jr., who has been confined tod her home on liOan Street by illness /for several days, is reported today as greatly im proved. Again today the condition of Major m W. A. Foil is reported as more favor -11 able. Mr. Foil has shown improvement B for the -pst several days and he con pj tinues to Vest very comfortably. H i- Register- of Deeds Elliott has issued jg marriage licenses to the following eou “ pies: J. B. Robinson and Mrs. Bessie ~ Lingerfelt, both of Concord: Paul T. ® Petrea ami Miss Annie Shoe, both of Mt. Pleasant. I 1 Miss Nannie Kluttz, daughter of Mr. 11 and Mrs. G. S. Kluttz, who underwent j, an operation at the Concord Hospital I ■ several weeks ago. continues to improve II and will be carried to her home in a few [ i days. j i Tickets for the entertainment to be givenßnext Thursday evening when the Zimmer Harp Trio will be here, are now on sale. The entertainment promises to [ be one of the unusual merit and interest and should serve as a real treat for the i music lovers of the city. i ■ Six defendants were scheduled to be J tried in recorder's court this afternoon, i police officers reported this morning. Two j 1 defendants were charged with being in -11 toxicated. one was charged with assault j with a deadly weapon, one was charged i with having liquorfi one with using pro l| sane and abusive language and one with ji intoxication and disorderly conduct. [ i Prof. Price Doyle, music teacher in the lj Concord schools, will give a course in ■ | public school music to the rural school i teachers of the county at their several ■ meetings to be held during the year. The j first meeting for this work will be held i the first Saturday in December at the ; court house, the meeting to begin at 10 I a. m. ! There was a decided change in the i temperature Saturday night. Early Sat urday heavy clouds Jiung over the city and rain was predicted. However, it 1 cleared up in the afternoon and a sharp wind brought lower temperatures. Ice was reported in ail parts of the city and I county yesterday morning, and in some places again this morning. S Results of some of the football games played Saturday follow: Carolina 6, Dav idson 0; Trinity 12. Wofford 0; State 0. Maryland 0; Wake Forest 41, Elon 0: Georgia 0, Auburn 0; Virginia 6, V. P. I. 0; Vanderbilt 3, Georgia Tech 0: Yale 10, .Princeton 0; Dar.tmouh 27, Cornell 14; Army 14, Columbia 14; Notre Dame 34, Nebraska 6; Brown 7, Harvard 0. W. R. Flory, of the service department of the Hoekenbury System. Inoy is spend ing the day here. Mr. Flory will re turn to Concord later so as to keep in touch with local people who ate leading the hotel campaign and give to them such , advice as he can in regard to the kind of hotel to be erected and the best mqth- ' ods of collecting the funde subscribed for the hotel. Police officers yesterday killed a horse * and mule that were deserted in a field » nead the Kannapolis road. The animals ' were brought here Sat unlay and their J owner tried to deem them here, but po | lice officers broke up the plans so the I owner carried them to a field north of I the city and left them. The horse was | too weak to stand and officers shot him Iqn the ground. The mule was able to' l stand but could hardly walk. | I Collections of North Carolina revenue f up to October Ist this year exceeded the 1 collection for last year to the same date | by over $51,000. says an. announcement > from Commissioner Doughton’s office. t * has .been feared ..that the textile depres sion would seriously affect state revenues I hut such appears not to hare been the' I Av/ V PEP'TI'MIST The most exclusive club in Concord is ; now forming. It is called the Super ! pep-ti-mist Club and only those hotel I stock salesmen who have sold $2,000 | worth cr more can belong. The fol lowing is the membership to date: A. B. Palmer. W. B. Ward. Dr. J. i A. Patterson. Cameron Mac-Rae. Rev. J. C. Rowan. Joe Rost. W. W Flowe. R. E. Ridenhour. Jr.. C. W. Byrd. E. L. Hicks, Joe Gaskey. R. C. Litaker. H. B. Wilkinson, Parks M. Lnfferty. J. L. Pe trea. A. H. Jarratt, D. A. McLaurin, Dr. R. M. King. W. H. Gibson. Geo. S. Kluttz, L. T. Hartsell, Jr., M. M. Lin ker. P. H. Searboro. Walter I, Furr. Robert E. Jones. J. V. Pharr. J. M. Cul cleasure, F. M. Youngblood. A RARE MUSICAL TREAT. As the second number of the Lyceum Course given under the auspices of the Collegiate Institute and Mont Amoena • Seminary “Richmond's Little Symphony" | will render a rich programme Saturday evening, the 15th. J Coached by Aaron Richmond, the Bos- I ton Impresario and manager of musical | celebrities, “The Little Symphony” pre sents the world’s greatest masterpieces. For variety of instruments and skill fulness of rendition the programme to be offered excels any eyer given in Mt. Pleasaut. A rare treat awaits those who come out for this performance.—Adv. MASONIC NOTICE. Special Communication Stokes Lodge -No. 32 A. F. iV A. M. Monday night No vember 17th. at 7 :30 o’clock. Work on first degree. All Master Masons are re quested to be present. There will be some very important business. Bv order of the W. M. J. M. CTILCLEA SURE,. Sec. gpoociocxactwoocxjcaoooooooor* j WANTED SI SODA DISPENSER ii \ CLINE’S PHARMACY j Phone 333 | Clines Pharmacy j j domwmnooopoanoooootioot" Concord’s New Hotel will be financed this week. Concord must succeed. If we don’t get the Hotel now we may never get it! ' - ' A} CITIZENS OF CONCORD IT’S UP TO YOU! BUY STOCK! Courtesy of STANDARD BUICK COMPANY Opposite City Fire Dept. CONCORD COTTON MARKET MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1924 Cotton 24 Cotton Seed .52 1-2 How Coirid You Choose a Love lier Gift? ’Not though you searched the whole through, could you find a gift with more of the qualities I gifts shou|ri have? Here is beau ty absolute and enduring; itself suggestiveof friendship, affection or love—Christmas can come and go, but the loveliness and useful ness of the gifts prove this store will not pass away. The Old Reliable W. C. Correli Jewelry i Company SIGNOR (APELLI WITH THE ZIM | MER HARP TRIO. 1 Signor Capclli- is young and good to look at. possessing a stage presence and a personality without which few make a success regardless of other attainments, j Music lovers and all people take a keen interest in the folklore music of all nationalities. All Italians sing Neapolitan folk songs SIGNOR CAPELLI but few sing them with a real Neapolitan lilt. Signor (’apelli is second to none in this held and gives an entire group of these gems. The great Enrico Caruso a ltd ItHd, V ic ier Machine have made thenpjiart of America's music. Hundreds of Italians in Italian sections crowd the auditorium when ('apelli sings, for folk songs are most popular of all even with American audiences. A VAULT THAT KEEPS OUT ALL WATER TNJOT one drop of water can 1 ' enter this vault, because it Is constructed on the "div ing bell” principle, of twelve gauge Keystone copper-bear ing steel which positively resists rust and corrosion. It affords the permanent protec tion we desire for the remains of our loved ones. (Stone, brick and concrete vaults let water in and hold it.) We supply the Clark Grave Vault because it has proved to be the most per fect forin of protection. It is guaranteed for fifty years. WILKINSON’S FUNERAL HOME Photic No.. 9 Open Day and Night For Good Eats GO TO TIIE . Ideal Lunch Room Good Hpme Cooking Courtesy and Service Just Around the Corner from the j City Hall. CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET ! (Corrected weekly by Cline & Moose) ] Figures named represent prices paid < for produce on the market: i Eggs .45 Butter j go 1 ountry Ham - Country Shoulder Country Hides : IT lan oily skin needs— Venetian Velva Cream. A non- 1 fattening nourishing cream for I sensitive skins,, exquisitely fine, I delicately scented. sl, *2, SB. 1 Venetian Lille Lotion. A liquid I powder foundation. In six shades i ~Cream, White, Naturelle, Span- 1 ish Itachel, Special Rachel, and M Ocre. $1.50, $2.50 Venetian Pore Cream. Closes open pores, corrects their laxness, refines the coarsest skin, sl, $2.50. Gibson Drugstore OW Newspapers, Three Package, for 10c afMong as they last. Times-Tribune Land Posters, 10 Cents Per Half Down. at Times-Tribune Office. 60 or more, one cent each. £tt For Sate or Rent—Heven Room House on Kerr Street; modern imorovementT M. 3. Corl. T aS*T Far r«w subnrlptioa to eitherW I—- ■ ■ I “ : ! Dress Well, jjf w"x and -Wylli j j;. ' Succeed r ) * \ \ •! I They will stand the • 'lij fi\ | jj acid test of time’'' j | ]! ‘ | j These beautiful new I ; 7/ Nr^ s s r - shades in the new mod- ’ / "O'/ p els * / (0> Kir 1 [ HOOVER’S \I \ ' | “The Young Man’s ‘.‘““li \ \ | Store ■ bCHLOSS d , Baltimore | \ , Clothes 1 J ((-n j .; I° 00000000 °0000c3000000000000cxxxxxx)000000000000000000 STRONG WITH THE STRENGTH | J I tubes, because the materials tlmt cn- Hr ter their manufacture are the strong- Hp ost an< * most durable manufactured, i If WJKKk \Vt vW Just as mountains are composed of j enduring qualities, so our tiros and ! - i u^PS nrP designed—to give maximum 1 || ■ '4KI HOWARD’S FILLING STATION ! 11 ' to |® "“Service With a Smile” 0 PHONE 880 | 0< * 000^,00 OOOOOOC?OOOC?OOOCKXXX>OOtxaOOOOOOGOrx>OOOOtX i COAL 1 I Don t forget I have a splendid Lump Coal for $7.75 per it r Ton. j Rest Double Screened Tellico at $9 00 i a A. B, POUNDS I '' JWWWWW OOOOGO©r>QOfX>OOGPOOOOeiGQQQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO©O&S’' c Come Clean With Us j: 1 BOOST CONCORD i i I BUY HOTEL STOCK | | and i|; We Will Dye For You jji I HOW ABOUT YOUR WINTER |! ! CLOTHES? i| HBHBKSVI] Better get them out and | look them over—send us i those that need cleaning ]i[ I and pressing, as no doubt i|; Un’T 1I II You will be delighted jT I■ I IfJH L with the results we are ! If Tii i r a^'e to p r °d uce > eyen ° n * some that you are con’sid ’ - ering discarding. | | PHONE 787—WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER w Bob s Dry Cleaning Co. | i| PHONE 787 We believe that the building of the New Hotel will in- | crease the value of all real estate in the city of Concord, and we further believe that it is the civic duty of every citi zen who can to take some stock in this great community enterprise. r | =—CAIJARRUS-SAVINGS BANK I" ' ■■■■-■ —J Monday Noyember 17, 1924,