Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Jan. 10, 1925, edition 1 / Page 3
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Saturday, January, 10, 1925 ,OOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Double Your Happiness With a I Besides being economical to buy and maintain, is a Quality Automobile anyone can be proud to own. It is ! modern in appearance and construction. It is so easy to J drive that any member of the family can use it. Call at cjur showrooms and inspect this automobile i which has doubled the happiness of thousands of families J at little, if any, added cost. . . < j MOTOR & TIRE SERVICE CO. CHEVROLET DEALERS, CONCORD Sales and Service ij Phone 298 19-25 E. Corbin St. 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 We wish to announce the arrival I I I of 12 new spring styles in ladies’slip- I |; pers. Latest patterns and shades for : ijj Spring. All sizes, 2 1-2 to 8. Widths i ||| AAA to D. i l l i i RUTH-KESLER SHOE STORE :; t ] Successors to S. S. Brown Shoe Store 1 !| 3l South Union St. 1 * Phone 116 I I INTERIOR PAINT We feature Benjamin Moore’s Sani- Flat Which has no equal as a wall paint. We also have a complete line of Interior Enamels and Varnishek If you are going to refinish the in- ; terior of your home see us for prices. I Yorke & Wadsworth Co. i THE OLD RELIABLE HARDWARE STORE Phone 30 I The Kelvinator Will Do It Electrify your refrigerator, Freeze your own ice and deserts * I Keep your refrigerator dry and sanitary, the tempera- ] ture al ways the same and much dower than with ice ALL AT HALF THE COST OF ICE. I 45 Per Cent, of the premature deaths of adults is due directly to 1 stomach trouble and practically all of this trouble is caused from eat- | ing food improperly preserved. Why not protect your good health when ' you can create a handsome savings account with the money saved each year by a Kelvinator. J. Y. PHARR & BRO. PHONES 103 AND 127 SDQoooooooogoeogeooooor^ CREO PINUS The Cough Remedy Hundreds of people right here in \ Concord gladly testify of its wonder ful merits. 1 j PEARL DRUGSTORE oooooootoooooooooooQoooooocodaoaoooooooooooooooooooj THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE l Bobbers to Bob Beautifully Must Bob to Own Type , Declares Nestle fSSmSL —. \ | m ly - —« ji n mMmm 2» m /4k JKai Wn m W" 1 stbwsht bob Bear ' JUsmsrWtf ■ ■. «- ,1' § >m j*M n fk m I ' - v I / I peaMAMERi V / wave e>oe CHICAGO Are you bobbing [ your hair according to your type? ! Whether you are old or young, i sylph-like, or inclined to be stout, | there is a bob to suit you perfect | ly, according to Charles Nestle, i New York hair specialist and | originator of the permanent wave, | in an address before a convention i of hairdressers here. “If you are a fleshy woman, | never get a fluffy bob,” said Mr. i Nestle. “The bob should be plain i - and neat in outline. If you have | a very round face, a straight bob I will not be becoming. The clip i should then follow the outline of ' the head. “If you have a thin face, the < i NEWS OF THE CHURCHES ; Trinity Reformed. | The Sunday School and men’s class ! meet at 0:45 a. m. J. O. Moose is i superintendent. A friendly contest with J Salisbury, Kannapolis and Charlotte be gins at 9:45. Every member of the i church and Sunday school is urged to | be| present for the study of the Word. Services at 11 a. in. and'7 p. m. Ser i mons by the paster. -You are cordially welcomed. St. James Lutheran. I Sunday School at 9:45 a. m., S. K. i, Patterson superintendent. Chief service II at 11 a. m. Junior and Senior Luther lj League at op. m. Vespers at 7p. m., j | This church welcomes you. Second Presbyterian. 1 1 Sunday School, Baraca and Philathpa ji classes, 9:45 a. m. Worship and preach- l 1 ing at 11 a. m. subject of sermon, “The | Sin of Worrying.” Second hurch serv ' ice at 5 o’clock. Christian Endeavor at 1 6 o’clock. The Bible story contest will be held in this church January 25th at 5 p. m. Methodist Protestant. I Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Worship services at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Ser l[ mons by the pastor. (It has been found I I impracticable to hold the special radio 11 service that had been planned and we lj shall have the regular service. ) Junior i Christian Endeavor at 1:30. Senior I Christian Endeavor at 0:15. The quar | terly conference will meet at 7:30, on i Monday evening. All officers are urged to attend this meeting. Prayer meet | ing on Wednesday evening. The public [( is , invited to all services. First Presbyterian, i (Jesse C. Rowan. Pastor.) i Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. Wtn- I I ing worship at 11 o’clock. Vesper serv i ice at sp. m. Midweek service Wed nesday at 7:30 p. m. The public is | cordially invited to all these services. Bt. Andrews Lutheran. j Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. Holy Communion at 11 a. m. Luther League at 6 p. m. Everybody welcpme. Calvary Lutheran. l Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. Luther | League at 6p. m. Verpers at 7p. m. \ Public cordially invited. Forest Hill Methodist. , Sunday School at 9:45 a. m.. A. G. i Odell, superintendent, Stonewall J. Sher | rill, assistant superintendent. Morning |: worship and preaching at 11 o’clock, i j Subject of sermon, “Growth Unto Har | vest.” Epworth League devotional uieet i ing at 6p. m. Evening service at 7 1 l o’clock. Subject of sermon, “The Last 1 | Lap.” Those who may desire are wel come to worship with us. THOS. F. HIGGINS, Pastor. A. R, P. Church. Sabbath School at 10 a. m., J. E. Me- 1 P Clintock, superintendent The pastor, > Rev. M. R. Gibson, who has been ill for * j several weeks, hopes to be able to hold 1 service at 11 a. in. and 7p. m. Y. ] P. C. U. Will meet at 6p. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday at 7 :30 p. m. All Saints Efcrbcopul. (Rev. Chas. B. Scovil, Rector) First Sunday After Ephiphany. 1 Holy Communioq 8 a. m. Church . Sunday school and 1 Bible clas 10 a. m. ■ Morning prayer and sermon by the rector 1 iat 11 o'clock. All are welcome to our 1 services. < McGill Btrat Baptist. i (J. R. Pentuff, Ph.D., Pastor) i Bible school at 9:80. Pastor lectures i to men’s Bible class. Secretary 'Blanks, i of the Y. M. O. A., will make a talk to i |S the school. Worship and sermon at 11 : ~ FLUFFY 808 straight bob should again be avoid* ed for this type of bob has a tend ency to make the face appear thin ner than ever. A wide wave will give a soft, fluff:' look about the ears and make the face took broad er. “For a young girl, the fluffy bob is always the most becoming. There is nothing prettier than a ringlet bob for the young de butante with small features. This type of girl should never wear the straight bob for it has a ten dency to make one look older, 1 mOre sedate and even ‘vamplsh’. | “The older woman should be most particular regarding her bob.! Much more particular than the average woman is. She should never under any circumstances wear a ringlet bob, but have her hair clipped to ‘fit her head* by following the outline of the head in back, leaving the hair long enough at the sides to make wide, i soft waves," o’clock. Subject “Knifing and Burning the Words of God.” Short memorial ser vice in honor of members who passed away during the past year. Special ser vice at 7:15. Subject: "A Three Fold Offic’al Function of the Local Church.” Fine singing at these Services. Dr. Loudy the great tenor singer who delighted a full house last Sunday night, will sing at these services. B. ¥:* P. U. at 0:15. YOUNG WOMAN TfefcLS WHY SHE GAVE AWAY HER BABY Weldon Girl Declares Husband Had Mistreated Her and Taken Other Child From Her. Fayetteville. Jan. 9.—Because 'her husband would not let her have her four-year-old girl she gave away her four-months old baby' to a stranger on the train from Rocky Mount to Fayette ville, Bessie Deßerry, of We’don, told Travelers’ Aid and police officials here. The woman from Salisbury to whom she gave the baby, she said, was “big and fat and nice looking”. Her story of the giving away of the infant tallied with that told in Associated Press dis patches. The young woman, who says she is 23 years old, appears to be mentally unbalanced, and told a pitiful story of alleged cruelty on the part of her husband. She declares that he threatened to kill her three weeks ago and ran her away from home. “If I couldn’t have my oldest child, I didn’t think it was right, to ‘ keep my baby,” she continued, after telling that her husband had kept the older girl. He was kind to her, she said, until three years ago, when he began to treat her cruelly. “They are all afraid of him, she added; “no matter whnt he does, he gets by with it.” He was a horse trader, the woman declared, and had been in many lawsuits, in which 'he al ways won. COOPER WILL ATTEND INAUGURAL CEREMONY Lieutenant Governor Not Yet In Eclipse, Although He Has Done Little Presid ing. Tom Bost in Greensboro News. Raleigh, Jan. 9. —Lieutenant Governor W. B. Cooper’s absence at home gave rise today to flie story that the retir ing official will not attend the inaugura tion here next week, but senators de clare that be will come back to partici pate in the ceremonial. The lieutenant governor has deferred entirely to incoming Lieutenaht' Gover nor Elmer Long in the appointment of Committees and Mr. Long has had his way from the start. Four yearn ago full reference was made to outgoing Lieu tenant Governor Max Gardner, who named rsome of the important commit tees as a handover from the former ad ministration. But Mr. Cooper’s ab sence does not mean his submergence. He will return and be among the officials who participate. The lieutenant governor has done lit tle presiding at this session and for that matter, he has given the gavel to presi dents pro-tempore on many a former occasion. He will handle the Senate but little from this time forward. But he la not yet in eclipse. Dr. Peacock Surgeon In Veteran Hos p Hal. Thoraasville. Jan. 9.—Dr. J. W. Pea cock, now of Cajon, Calif., but ad judged a paranoiac by the courts of Davidson couniar, in Lexington, when tried for the slaying in Tbomasville of Chief of Police 3, E. Taylor, and es caped from confinement in the criminal insane department of the penitentiary at Raleigh a year later, r hae accepted tbs- position of Chief surgeon in a gov ernment veterans hospital in California, according to reports reaching here from members of the Peacock family now in HARRY DAUGHERTY IS )j GUEST AT WHITE HOUSE j Attends Reception at Invitation of Presi-' dent Coolidge. j Washington, D. C., .Tan. B.—Harry M. ! Daugherty was a guest, at the White 1 House tonight for the first time sinee he I left the cabinet last March. At the in vitation of President Coolidge, the for mer attorney general was nap of about 2,000 persons who attended the first of four state receptions given by the Presi dent and Mrs. Coolidge in honor of the diplomatic corps. Mr. Daughtery had been in Philadel phia on a business trip before coming to Washington. Post and Flagg’s Cotton Letter. New York, Jan. 9.—lt has been another comparatively idle day and the cotton market still refuses to move much in either direction. Foreign ad vices were favorable and this market made a fair response but ran into some what larger offerings in the snape of realizing and hedging, with selling for short account on the reactionary theory so that, although the tone was general ly steady, prices worked off again. Weekly figures were construed as rath er bullish, showing for the first time tbi*s season a decrease in the visible supply, while takings and exports com pare very favorably with last year and suggest o impending pressure from the actual supply. While perhaps not so broad and urgent as heretofore, the de mand for spots is reported surprisingly good, with an unimpaired basis. Eastern millsare not believed to have any stocks of raw material worth talking about and unless interferred with by strikes will continue in the markets steadily for considerable quantities around pres ent prices. Accumulations of goods are reported well cleaned up and mills are now able to take a more independent attitude as to what business they will accept and are generally insisting on prices that will leave them at least a moderate margin of profit and ap parently booking considerable business on such a basis. It still looks as if prices could be benten down if anyone cared to try that experiment but the 1 undertaking looks in defiance of the I economic facts and involves the risk of \ having to bid prices up higher than they started in order to get the cotton back. No important advance seems probable in the near future, unless it results from efforts to reverse the tech nical position and the trade onnnot fol low prices up very far as yet but on de- ( cline there is a huge ability to absorb i offerings. POST AND FLAGG. j “Them Days Gone Forever.” N. C. Christian Advocate. With Duke University destined to be come eventually the peer of Yale, Colum bia, Chicago or Leland Stanford; with 32 per cent, of a $40,000,000 endowment to assist hospitals of North and South Carolina in caring for the sick; with 10 per cent, of the same endowment to assist white and black orphan children in the two Carolinas to get a start in life; with the country churches and the superannuated Methodist preachers of North Carolina amply provided for, thi future is fjill of promise. North CnroUV ua. which has been one of the least amoqg! all the commonwealths of these United States, both in the eye of the nation and of the Southern Methodist Church, will \ eventually come to occupy n place on the national map and in the public eye. One tenth of all the Southern Methodists on the planet dwell in North Carolina, yet from the days of Francis Asbury down ' to this good hour no native born North i Carolinian has ever been chosen one of the chief pastors, with the single excep -1 tion of O. P. Fitzgerald, who left his native state to minister to the gold dig -1 gers of California and later came to live : in Tennessee. Hitherto, many Method • ists, to say nothing of Americans who ! are not Wesleyans, have not so much as heard that there be a North Carolina. > “But them days is gone forever,” thanks ' to ,T. B. Duke, a son of the Old North State, and a great sterling citizenship that ’ is now setting the pace for the nation in ! business, public education, morals and ► religiose ‘ Denver's leading woman bowler is Mrs. Margaret Taylor, a telephone " operator, who has an individual aver ' age of 173. MOM*N POP_ BY TAYLOR HI HECK- I'M TIRED OF- VOORttM' ~llls OH L ALMOST ) —— M' : MAKES A RES'LAR. SLAOC §1 \ Tocfcot MAC- r == ======^^ AME -UWIISHL COULD THINK f!§ T\)P C-83T Am ? " SOM6 VMAM OF GETTING OFF APPOINTMENT * <SO TO A MOVIE THIS AFTERNOON f NtflTH NIM ) fTTP SjMKL ' \NDG>ET OUT OF-VWORKIN'j ' DENTIST THIS \ MM ALL RIGHT- S weftpy. | : 1 j - L WANT J \ SUCK?-NOVO X. WONT \ To REMIND HOU THAT IT’S I HAVE TO WORRY ABOUT §gg| CUSTOMARW FOR. MM EMPLOYEES E=l V WORKIN'ANMAAORS To MAtCe UP ANM TIME THEY jHH L. TODAY - 3 T cam 1 LOSE - SO WHEN MOU'RG . .... .. ..», TUE .. .... T . t 1 —'-J* a* 1 — '■ —— •' Ai ' • 50-54 SOUTH UNION STREET, CONCORD, Keeping Faith With Customers We are glad to be a part of this community. We are happy in the thought that our home is here, that as citizens of this community, we share its joys and privileges and help bear its burdens. I We strive to serve on the basis of the Golden Rule, the principle upon which all our stores are founded. Our high-grade values and low prices en courage thrift and economy. This is one of 571 Stores, which keeping faith vith customers, have created the World’s Largest Chain Department Store Organization. I A MODERN BEAUTY SHOPPE j When a lady comes to our Shoppe she may trust her- ] j self to knowing hands for we can match features in-any i * line of beauty culture she may desire. Through years of ! specialization we experts have developed this line of work ] | from a technical task into a high art. Strictly Sanitary and Courteous Service | EFIRD’S BEAUTY SHOPPE Call 890 For Appoinntments ;; While Fresh Vegetables and Very ']; Scarce Try Our High Class Canned Goods | “ In Canned Vegetables we have Faultless, Lily of the ' ' Valley and Monarch Brands. In Canned Fruits we have Pratlow’s and Faultless de- ] * ! licious fruits in syrup. PHONE US YOUR ORDERS ’ Sanitary Grocery Co. S| “A REAL GOOD PLACE TO TRADE” OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO PAGE THREE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Jan. 10, 1925, edition 1
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