Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Jan. 29, 1925, edition 1 / Page 3
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Thursday, January 29, 1925 pooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooopoooooooooeopoo^ • While Fresh Vegetables and Very Scarce 8 Try Our High Class Canned Goods In Canned Vegetables we have Faultless, Lily of the !j[ ; Valley and Monarch Brands. \ In Canned Fruits we have Pratlow’s and Faultless de ! licious fruits in syrup. PHONE US YOUR ORDERS i Sanitary Grocery Co. j “A REAL GOOD PLACE TCfcTRADE” § OQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO GRIMY RUGS “RE-PEPPED’* We. not only clean ’em in the inimitable “Master Way” but we bring back the orig inal beautiful colors, if they are not worn away. Try Cleaning the old before buying the NEW RUGS PHONE PHONE “SEND IT TO BOB" aOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCCOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Double Your Happiness With a li v lUF™ Besides being economical to buy and maintain, is a ! ! Quality Automobile anyone can be proud to own. It is I [ modern in appearance and construction. It is so easy to ' drive'that any member of the family can use it. ! I Call at our showrooms and inspect this automobile ] S which has doubled the happiness of thousands of families 1 O at little, if any, added cost;. 1 MOTOR & TIRE SERVICE CO. CHEVROLET DEALERS, CONCORD Sales and Service Phone 298 19-25 E. Corbin St. i Hose For Milady jj We carry a complete assortment I of the Rollins Runstop Hose. New Spring Colors are here. Pure thread jj |; Silk. Also Chiffon. Come in and see ij I! them. ij RUTH-KESLER SHOE STORE STYLES OF TOMORROW 31 South Unloi\ St. ' Phone 116 ! 7tt‘ It Pays to Put an Ad in The Tribune r CROSSWORD PUZZLE _ZZMZZ — r ■■3 H ■■ ■ —yp— iStUmte -p—-— - -M5J — 1 Plmto — w Ji W 1 Numbers 0 horizontal and 62 horiz cntal have the game definition, but they are different! How come? Figure it out for yourself. HORIZONTAL 1 Identical. 5 Bread. 9 Kvening meals. 12 Wheeling. 15 Soon. 16 Duck with very fine down. 18 Smell. 19 Undeveloped flower. 21 Incline head. 22 A unit. 28 Like. 25 Allow. 27 Floor covering. 28 Presence. 29 Aeriform fluid. 81 Court. 38 Placed. 34 Perch. 25 To engrave. 1 37 Claw. 39 Man of valor. 40 Sick. 41 Baronet. 42 Bellow. 43 Accomplished. 45 Victuals. 47 Obligation. ■ 50 Tear. 51 Existed. * 52 Drunkard. 1 54 Spawn of fishes. , 55 Neuter pronoun. 56 To entangle. 58 Conjunction. 60 Form of very to. be. 61 Kindled. 62 Evening meal (English.) 64 To stroke caressingly. 66 Article used in cleaning. 68 Lowest male voice. 70 Spirit. 72 Surround. 74 To lay schemes. 70 A kind of fish. 77 At first or once. TODAY’S EVENTS Thursday, January 29, 1925 Observance of “Carnation Day,” in memory of President William McKinley. Kansas today celebrates the beginning of her 65th year of Statehood with meet ings and banquets throughout the state. Representative Charles M. Stedman, of North Carolina, the only Confederate veteran in Congress, today enters upon his 85th year. The President and Mrs. Coolidge this evening will give the second in the series of State dinners that will mark the so cial season at the White House. A notable wedding in New York to day will be that of Miss Barbara —. Gug genheim, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Guggenheim, to John Robert Law son-Johnson of London. Kansas having decided to have a state bird the decision as to whether it shall be the wren or the quail will be made i by vote of the school children through : out the state today. A call has been isssued to the executive ! heads of the largest public utility cor ] porntions in the country to meet in con i ference at San Francisco today for a dis | mission of “vital, engineering, commer i cial. public relations and rate problems i facing the manufactured gas business.” | One of the significant signs of the new i international times is the reception and i dinner which the George Washington | Sulgrave Institution is giving in New i York tonight in honor of Timothy A. i Smiddy, Irish minister to the United j THE OLD HOME TOWN BY STANLEY fijaSPLUNKMTT WAS _ I LAST NI«MT- -me CUSTOMARY STUNT Ol* TnSStNttlH • “ -THE PROSPECTIVE MEMBER ONTto “ WENT THROUGH WITHOUT A HITCH- THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE VERTICAL. 1 Affected person. 2 Canoe). 3 Myself. 4 Before. . 5 Because. 6 Hebrew deity. 7 In company. 8 Drive. 9 Harm. 10 Within, jl Crime. 12 Scarlet. 13 Negative. 14 Artificial cave. 17 Period. 20 A form of moisture. 22 Not in. 24 Rested. 26 Child. 27 Move rapidly. 28 Ozone. 30 Part of head. 32 Fertile spot in desert. 33 Harbors. 34 Drain. 36 Haste. 3.8 Falsehood. 39 Coal scuttle. 43 Melodies. 44 Chewed. 45 A touch. 46 Male child. 48 Fur neckpiece. 49 House of worship. 51 Soaked. 53 Child’s toy. 56 Rubs. 57 Affirmative. 59 Scrapes. 61 Wash. 63 A poisonous snake. 65 Sound of a horn/ 67 Upon. i i 68 Case. 69 Metal in stone. 71 We. 73 Behold. , , 75 Either. States. Many of the most distinguished men in the United States have accepted invitations. Where He Was at 5:S0: Lawyer: “Tell the court exactly where you were on the twentieth day of said month at five-thirty in me after noon.” Defendant: “I was on the corner of Second and Main Streets asking a man a question.” Lawyer: “Ah-ha! But how do you know it wns exactly five thirty?” Defendant: “Ah-ha yourself! The question I was asking him was what time it was.” SIMPLE WAY TO TAKE OFF FAT Cany anything be Ampler than taking a convenient little tablet four times each day until your weight is reduced to nor mal? Os course uot. Just purchase a bolos Marmola Prescription Tablets from your druggist for one dollar, and start now to reduce. Follow directions —no starvation dieting or tiresome exer cising. Eat substantial food, be as lazy as you like, and keep on getting slen der. Thousands of men and women each year regain healthy, slender figures by using Marmola Tablets. Purchase them from your druggist, or send direct to Marmola Co., General Motors Bldg, De troit, Mich. LEGUME CHOPS To Promote the Building of More Fertile Soils in Iredell. County. Statesville. X. 0., .Tan. 28.—T0 pro mote the building of more fertile soils iu Iredell' county by growing and plowing under legume crops, R. W. Graeber, farm agent for the State College extension di vision at work in this county, has just closed a week's intensive campaign. Dur ing this campaign a total of seventeen meetings were held in the various sec tions of the county. Approximately 700 of the lead-ing farmers of the county at tended these meetings. Bad weather during the early part of the week pre vented a larger attendance. At the close of each meeting those farmers interested in the planting of les pedeza were asked to hand in their homes to the county agent and 101 agreed to plant an acre or more as a soil im proving crop during the months of Feb ruary and March. A number of other farmers have come into the office of the county agent in Statesville since the meetings wore held and have agreed to plant some of their fields to this soil im proving crop, says Mr. Graeber. Mr. Graeber further states that many hundreds of other farmers will plant red clover this year. However, the campaign was especially put _on to promote the planting of lespedeza in that this crop grows well on poor soils, may be sown over the small grain at this season of the year and will make its best growth after the gr»in has been cut. This obviates the necessity of summer plowing at a time when farmers are very busy. Mr. Grneber also states that the interest cre ated by this campaign will continue to grow and will direct much attention to the importance of planting soil improv ing crops. He says that indications now are for more than 200 farmers of Ire dell county to grow lespedeza for the first time this year. Association of Modern Language Teach ers. Raleigh, Jan. 2!).—A meeting of the members of the Association of Modern Language Teachers will be held here to morrow morning at 9:30 o’clock, in con nection with the sessions of the North Carolina Educational Association, which convenes here today for a three-day ses-' tiion. The sessions of the Association of Modern Language Teachers will be held in the Edenton Street Church, beginning at 9:30 o’clock tomorrow morning. W. H. Wanamaker, of Duke University, is president of this branch of the associa ttion. Miss E. V. Lucas, of Wilson, is vice president and Miss Jessie C. Laird ,of the North Carolina College for Women, ds secretary. ' According to the program for this meeting the Spanish, German and French sections of this group will meet in the class rooms of the Edenton church at 9 :30. The rooms for the* various sec tions will be designated at the church building. A general business session of the de partment will be held at 12:30 in the normal class room for the purpose' of electing officers and transaelting other business for the year, The program of the Spanish section will be in charge of Sturges E. Levitt, of the University of North Carolina. The program of the French section will be in charge of F. G. Cooper, of Duke University. The program of the German section will be in charge of Walter D. Foy, of the University of North Carolina. Hotel Stock Good Investment. Stanly News-Herald. . The Rockingham Post-Dispatch tells of the sale of The Rockingham Hotel last 1 week, the purchase price having been I approximately ninety thousand. “This,” says the Post-Dispatch, “would make the original shares of stock net $145 per share—and is a striking contrast to the • worth of this stock about ten years ago ■ when they could scarcely be given away.” That paper then goes on to say that ten years ago some of the shares sold for ■ $lO and the owners were glad to get that’. Here’s a sample of the growth of the hotel business during the past decade. Ten years ago few hotels in the smaller , towns were paying. Today the hotel business is good in almost any town, large or small. The man who holds shares of stock in a hotel in a growing : tow r n, while he may not realize large annual dividends, has a good thing in , the way of an investment. Every day as the town in which a hotel is located , grows, the value of the stock in that [ hotel grows with it. i MftTQM. (13) SIMS ’ There is no hope In seeking happi ness unless you ore happy In the seeking. Good times are bed Mures (biles* you do more tha,n have a good lime. The only thing worse than being in a rut la being on no road it all; Popularity leaves very little time for steady thinking We all-do things without th;nr.:ng, and one Is being bored -with life. Life's amusing. People save so many things to see even though there isn’t any return trip. The importance of things close to you are magnlfled. like a cinder in your eya Today ta what we were all lock ing forward to yesterday. It makes a man mad to be dunned ’ for a bill, because be knows he may have to pay the thing. Patience is considered a virtue when it often is merely a case of not knowing what to do. You can only make interesting friends by being Interested. Tell others everything you knots' and they soon will find you don’t know anything they don't* ***** MB* OapvU* ’Tm » REMEMBER PENNY ADS ARE CASH _ stSKes 50-54 SOUTH UNION STREET, CONCORD, Apron Dress Savings! New Styles and Splendid Materials Our New York buyers xKB purchased over 60,000 of ' these Bungalow Aprons 1 That is why we can sell ( Vg* such splendid quality gar- ; \\ jM ments at this reasonable '! Pretty Trimmings ' Ililliii lace ed B es - c-yelet cm- If MPfeltJ broidery, rick-rack piping, CTSliill and olhet attractive trim- - |a|lfwfa mings feature these Aprons. RPHnnyp* In fine, imported ging- Tl//S /Li bams, Amoskeag ginghams,; IJr ( and fancy Scout percales, U See These /IB Medium Apron Dresses M M w and Large j lathe Window! 0 Wins Berth as Regular made Wore rapid strides in I 1 1024 <hSo John Heving of the aboco When the 1924 season Hp ly||jg S partJeul.ir Before ttie season fll pf clezed Heving was alternating || ; HB 'V'Jlli bar-k of the bat with the Bos- ' <■' ' JjjH eMns Steve O Neill and Val Lee Fohl set at rest the status of Heving for the coming sea son by announcing that he lMEßHfiaraffi -j would be the first string bach BgjpßfjnP 8 vy> - stop of the Red Sox -Heving has the makings of a great i catcher" says Fohl -He tK hasn't quite arrived as yet but Vi J look foi him to go big the j coming season He possesses “Ma’s” Inaugural Speech * tj W wL Jfl 1 Mrs Mil vas >r of Texas with all the pomp and ceremony which was given her many men predecessors Here she is shown delivering her inaugural speech as slat* officials and dignitaries listen. . , THE fMf CUN GETS 'EK « II 4--Jr-’M3«k>b&3l!ou£9ml PAGE THREE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Jan. 29, 1925, edition 1
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