Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Feb. 13, 1925, edition 1 / Page 5
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Friday, February 13,1025 ' -- - ■«., - lb/caTv^^lM m ftTSnlor Hi Y Gilfta of’Nq.-.2 School on Thursday eve ning was * great success, as an enter tainment as well as' financially, about SBO having been taken in, yrhich money is to go as part .payment 1 on the Moving picture machine used at the*.school,: ■ t j the musical .program before the play, was arranged by the Misses Lippard and Pemberton, and given by some of the yohtter girls. Miss Hallam, the kindergarten teach er,, of the “Y," and leader of the girla 'dlab at; IJTo. 2 school, presented the play. Under her direction each character was well represented, and the hat shop had so mai& different kind* of hat» that the moving picture, star/the adventuress, ev en a bonnet for the ,ted<jy-bear and an nutomobiie bood for the dog Fifi. were dnaffy supplied by the “disobligipg” .sales ladies. Mrs. Lee, a member of the faculty of No. 2, assisted In presenting the play, used in the play Were furnished by Those who took part in the play were: Mohe Jenkins, Margaret Hall, Ruby Ufimn, Nellie Stowe, Pauline BaHard, Pauline Honeycutt, Mary Verble, Ruby Baruhardt, Lillian Eudy, Louise Shelton, Mary Hudson, Mildred Miller, Atba Waters, Annie NorviHe, Lillie Nash, Es telle Kirk, Minnie Trull, Mable Honey cutt; Jessie Wineeoff. Miss Morris Entertains. Miss Louise Morris entertained at a bridge party Thursday afternoon honor ing Miss Insley Howell, of Easton, Pa. Covers were laid at two tables. After the game a delightful salad and i«e course was served. Miss Morris’ guests were: Sties Insley Howell, Miss. Helen Marsh, Sliss Margaret Virginia Brvin. Miss Elizabeth Smith, Miss Wil lfe White, Miss Miriam Coltrane, Miss Niney Lentz, Miss Mary Cannon and Sfksf J, I?. Cannon. Bridge l Party for Miss HowcJl. Sliss IntUCy ;Howe|l, guest of Mrs. J. F. Canon, was hoporee at a very de lightful party at the" hotfte 'of Mrs. J. A. Cannon on North Union Street Thurs day night. Bridge was played at three tables. Top score prizes were won by Miss Lucy Richmond Lcutz and Miles Wolff. Miss Howell was presented with a guest prize. At the conclusion -of , the game, delicious , were served. Enjoying Mrs. Cannon’s hospitality wjre: Miss Insley Howell, Miss Helen Marsh, Miss Lucy Richmond Lentz, Miss Elizabeth Smith, Miss Margaret Virginia Ervin, Miss Ruth Crowell and Gettys Guille, Wallace Moore, Joe Pell, Gray Bost, Miles • Wolff and Jones Yorke. Mrs. Deaton Entertains Bridge Club. Mrs. N. T. I)eatoB entertained the Thursday Night Bridge Club at her home on' South Union Street. Bridge was played at four tables. After the game, *■> delicious refreshments were served. ''•attVnaih# NeeWP'-'Mr*. Crowell, Jr.,P, B. Raifocd, Mrs. Porter, Misses Laura Gilion, Clara Gilion. Mary McKindle.v. The guests were: Mrs. A. B. Pounds. Mrs. Frank Pounds, Mrs. Gilbert Hendrix, Mrs. T. N. 'Spencer, Mrs. Clyde Propst j Mrs. Archie Fisher, Miss Rebecca pay vault, Mrs. John Potter, Mrs. Rupley Pounds, Mrs. George Fisher, Mrs. M. Si Ward and Mrs. George Graeber. President John Quincy Adams did not attend the inaugn ration of his successor, Andrew Jackson, March 4. 1828. He was taking his usual morning horseback ride. *, ; ' ASTHMA OL There is no “cure," hat " “ the-wheezy breathing that prevents sleep way \ oftentimes be relieved by: inhaling the soothing medicated vapors of*— ■ —f*H Y WSj&ci I Day Phone S4fl ; ' Night Plumes 360-HfeL | J Miss Grace Caldwell is spending sev >. eral weeks in Va., with her t sister, Robert H. Morrison. Mrs. J. L. Jermings and son have re ! turned 1 'ft/ their home in Columbia, S. ‘ C., after "spending several days with ’ 'Mrs. J. R.' McClelland. 1 -.jq. s Joe Robertson, manager of the North Carolina Peoples’ 'Service Company, of - Salisbury, spent' several hours/in the! s city Thursday. • • • 3 Mrs. .Jane White, of Rocky Ridge, is ; , spending some time with Miss. A. N. j , Lentz. / g t " Miss Grace Royster has returned from i ' several days visit iu High Point with j ; relatives. . - ’' Mrs. F. D. Fanning. Jr., who has been ' visiting friends and relatives in Wins • ton-Salem, has returned to her home. ’• • • The condition of Mrs. L. P. Davis, who : was hurt in an automobile accident Men > day, shows some improvement today. • * : • ! Miss Sara Frances Fisher is confined to her home on White Street by illness. ' * * * ‘ Miss Gretehen Tolar has returned to ( her work at the Parks-Belk Company ( after being confined to her home. for J several days by illness. •• • ( Miss Penelope Cannon is confined to 1 her home on account of illness. • • • J Mrs. Frank Minter, pf Charlotte, who i has - been visiting her aunt, Mrs. Ada j Rogers Gorman, hns returned to her ] home. ( • • • Miss Mary O’Neal and Miss AlTthia | Fennell, of Rock ‘HIU, will arrive in i Concord this afternoon to be the week end guests of Miss Margaret Virginia ] Ervin. ( •• • I Miss Insley Howell, of Easton, Pg., who has been visiting Mrs. .Toe F. Can non at her home on North Union Street, i will leave tonight for her home. • * • Mrs. D. G. Caldwell spent Thursday in Mqoresville where she had gone to at tend the funeral of her aunt, Sirs. Stephen Frontis. < Miss Mary Gibson Jenkins is able to 1 be out after an illness of two weeks. j Junior Kings Daughters Will Have a 1 Tea Saturday Afternoon. A social event which has been attract- i ing much attention in Concord for the j last few days is the tea which the Junior , Kings Daughters. Stonewall Jackson Cir- i cle, arc planning to have Saturday after- J noon at the home of Mrs. R. M. King, , on South Union street. The hourp are 1 to be from three to five o'clock. The tea is a benefit affair for the pur- i pose of raising funds to build a chapel ] at Samareand. ' Tills project is one which j has for its final endeavor -the building of I 1 * ehapH fc'milar to the one at the Stone- J wall Jackson Training School here. Kings Daughters all over the State arc bending every effort toward getting the chapel in ttys school. It will be remembered that one of the J first projects of the Kings Daughters in the State of North Carolina was the croc- 1 tion of the pretty stone building at the ] Training School. Os course it has since i become too small to lucre all the boys 1 of the Training School in it but it is , very usful for small gatherings and also i forms a beautiful addition to the arebi tecture qf the grounds. i The tea Saturday will be a very bril liant affair. At the door, Mrs. It. P. j Gibson, leader of the girls, and Betsey : Davis will receive. Mia. J. I*. Cook. State President. Mts. J. A. Cannon, Mary Can non and Mary Grady Parks will greet i the guests in the living room. Askins j Ivey and Louise Webb will take the , guests to the dining room where Miss Addie White, Mrs. L. A. Fisher, Eliza beth MeFadyen, AVjfiie White, Annie ' Gussy DayvUult, Marinin Coltrane and j Jenny Brown will serve. In the hall ’ Jessie Webb, Ruth Dayvault, Frances Roger. Virginia Reed and Julia Rowun 1 will help entertain the guests. Kings Daughters Express Thanks. There are many expressions of grati tude from the Kings Daughters for the generous response to the "Opportunity” j envelopes distributed last week so as i to give all friends of the cause an equal !| chance to participated in the work the j Kings Daughter* have been doing for 1 i the past fifteen, lycats: in the' jommunity. J If there are envelopes not collected j the Circle members will Appreciate your ; 00-operation if you will take them to t Mrs. J. A. Cannon or Misti Margie Me- J Eacheru. Mbs Carnes of N. W. C. T. U. Speaks •In the Schools Today. Miss Roberta Carnes, one of the lec- ' turers of the National Woman’s Chris tian Temperance- Union, Baltimore, is today speaking in the city schools- on the subject of "Temperance.” Miss Carnes is an eloquent speaker and wits | beard with much interest. | Miss Carnes is the guest of the local L Woman’s Christian Temperance Union* | Music Study Club -to Meet. I A called meeting of the Music Study I Club will be held tomorrow afternoon at | 5 o’clock with Mrs. W. H. Gorman, at F her home on Franklin Akeuue. 300000000000000000000000001 i VALENTINES ij 0 Get your Valentines while < ' 8 we have a good assortment. *! I Clines Pharmacy Phone 353 g “The Store” , Resource* Over One MiUion Dollars - -fi We have money to lend on the Weekly Payment Plan £ to be paid back in weekly payments as per the following B I r ill From 60.00 to 100.00 to be paid back at 2.00 per week t —From 100.00 to 150.00 to be paid back at 8.00 per week B; ss ’■ ■■ From 150.00 to 200.00 to be paid back at 4.00 per week §2 ! From 200.00 to 250.00 to be paid back at 5.00 per week B = From 250.00 to 300.00 to be paid back at 6.00 per week B = ■ From 300.00 to 400.00 to be paid back at 8.00 per week £l - ; |W f *4|W|| WaiHgMgar .'ipl//. From 400.00 to 500.00 to be paid back at 10.00 per week B = jh i aramniiß üßMir' i ee y° u a . re in consult our officers today. They B = iinfriWf will gladly give you any information desired. S gooi?bank?ng Company 1 * v C ONC ORI>» W S HiifHiHiiiiuiimnHiiwiiiumiuimiiiraiiiiuiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiWiHiimiiuiiiuNfiimHiiitfimiiNuiiiuuiuufliHHiuHuuiiiS K. OF P. NOTICE Regular meeting Concord Lodge No. 51 K. of T. Friday evening tit 7:30 o’clock. All members and visiting Pyth ians cordially invited to be present. E. E. PEELE, C. C. A “Master I; Cleaner” 1 8 Looks Far into | jij the Future! jlj He sees HUNDREDS of § i ] bundles of cleaning-work be- Q X ingi sent from YOUR home 8 X —to—Somewhere. He sees 8 X a possibility of GETTING O I[l that work if the QUALITY q X of his product merits it. 8 X That’s the reason he tries 8 ij! so hard to get a TRIAL or- o X d er - • 8 * | V . t fj X “Master” Cleaning of x jj TODAY must be good x ]! enough to insure the re- X || ception of your addition- | ;!; al work— I TOMORROW | \ A ‘Master” Cleaner Q > KNOWS that his claims to X s superiority are widely >| < broadcast—so—he simply | > must make 'good. And, he 8 s DOES make good. If you >| i appreciate really efficient, i| 1 5 neat and prompt work TRY o I the “Master.” || Master Cleaner’s < | Phone mr I YES, We Have Another Ship ment of Small Picnic Hams AT ONLY 20c Per Pound They’re Mighty Nice and Going Fast Cabarrus Cash Gro cery Go. _ Pfeorte WiW. Skv... .. .. ' y ' THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Evangelistic Services at Westminster Presbyterian Church. Quite a large audience greeting Dr. I. H. Russell, Synodical Evangelist, who is conducting a series of revival services at AVestmipster Prewbj terian~Church, eol o>ed. : "The Young Man Who Got a Second Chance” was the subject of the discourse Thursday night. The speaker emphasized r the very beautiful fffcl effective illustra tions and references the gospel of a sec ond chance. He used es a basis the story of John Mark, found in the 15th chap ter of the Acts of the Apostles. The subject for tonight has not been announced. Special sermon Sunday at 3:30 p. m. The subject will be announced tonight. I HEALTHY HAIR j Healthy Hair naturally, has a lovely gloss and nothing ][ ] 5 can successfully supply this gloss if the scalp is unhealthy i i 8 Hair that simply flies away is no more to be desired than | ! o the kind that is pasty with oil. | Electric Scalp Treatments make a. Healthy Scalp. jx WE MAKE HAIR SWITCHES | Parks-Belk Co., Beauty Shop | Phone 892 Listed as C. A. Henry’s Beauty Shop ' j jij MRS. FITZPATRICK C. A. HENRY g jj! . Waving, Shampooing, Etc. Hair Cutting O ' 7 ' ’ ' ""f ANNOUNCEMENT! j | Effective January 1, 1925, all insurance business formerly handled > j ift ty the Southern Loan and Trust Company was transferred to the Fetzer s 1 p & Yorke Insurance Agency. j | Offices in Cabarrus Savings Sank Building, Mezzanine Floor. Phone 231 | Fetzer & Yorke Insurance Agency ! I I P. B. FETZER A. JONES YORKE | Jewelry of Refine ment i Whatever you would expect to find in a Jewelry store that spec ializes on irefined jewelry, you : will find, here, if not in exactly the wg | for 1 STARNES-MILLER.PARKER COMPANY Jewelftrs and Optometrists . . V.. mmiminnnniiiiinmmiiimmniHinmfi i ~ ' ' II J * Song services from 7:30 to 8 are be- ' ing conducted by 8. C. Boger. Miss Louise i Spencer is organist. The public is Cor- > ' dially invited. H. WILSON, Pastor. Five Persons Hurt In Auto Accident. Lexington, N. C., Feb. 12.—Five per -1 song were injured, one seriously, in two ’ automobile collisions on the Central High -1 wpy. on either side of Lexington last - night. Casey Snyder. 16 years old. son of James Snyder, a farmer, was perhaps 7 fatally injured when a coupe in which ■ he was riding struck another par parked by the roadside about eight miles east ■ 1 of here. He was still unconscious today.* j Formerly, great Athenians were* \ buried in cedar chests. USE GLYCA-PYNA Thp Creosote Throat and Bron / chial Preparation For throat, croup, whooping cough, catarrhal bronchitis, bron chial, asthma and especially coughs of long standing and deep seated colds, there is nothing bet ter. If you are debilitated and in a rundown condition, are sasefeptr* i . Me to colds or have weak kings, ! use GLYCA-PYNA as a tonic. • Pht Up fn Three Siees, sl.fO, eoc, and 38c a Bottle ' j SOLD BY ' | Cafearras Dnjg<*>. ; j ■ i i This way away o .'I ■* S from the Gladstone! * PINE SUITS $85.00 | If you’ve been paying $5 to $lO % more, we invite you to take your nose j 2 away from the grindstone and look at ' 9 these suits. 9 No—-not February prices on September , ’ | clothes—not “Has Been” models or v * S } “Used to Be” materials —but NEW goods S I —Spring models*—suits that fvere I 1 laying on a tailor’s Jap On January 10th. All season long you can expect just S such fine values here. 4 p We’re out for your business and we're >! .willing to save you money if you will j? let us have it. B Suits SBO.OO, $40.00 Knox Hats _1 s7.ob to SB.OO v Other Mates $3.80 to $5.00 Caps ____—., $2.00 to $3.00 2 Bates Street and? Eclipse Shirts $2.00 to $5.00 X New Spring Oxfords $5.00 to SIO.OO C | 1 Everything Worn By the Well Dressed Man ||| Browns -Cannon Co. ] Everything Worn by the Well Dressed Mak ' § i ■ There are Setts for every purpose, < • j Its There are Bells of every tone, ■ But the Bells that most enchant us— |f Are the Bells on our Telephone. . |tf Jingle bells, jingle bells, jingle -all the day, rj Oh! what fun it is to trade in this enlightened day. p[ We run a Grocery store second to none ,'n the city. •»’ Ijj' If We are the largest retail produce dealers in the cjfy. j | We also carry a full line of fresh and cured meats. I We want your business and arc just as close to you as you are to your I telephone. \ I Our phone Number is 68 aud we are on the job early ..and late. €. H. BARRIER & CO. 210-215 W. Depot Street. Ig* 1 "" mini II | ii.,,i„n 11. .1111 m . ... 00«xxxxXK > OOOOOOOOOOOtHIWOOOOOOOOOq<MHMKraXHHK?000000{Wfc. | A FEW USED CARS ;: At Real Bargains • ' 1 | One 1924 Ford Coupe a 1 One Hupmobile Touring f ! > One Dodge Touring :* | All the Above Cars Are in Good Mechanical Condition I Corl Motor Co. PHONE 830 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 ;j ALL THIS WEEK \ We are offering almost unheard of bargains in Quality | Footwear for the whole family. Come bring your feet. We Can Save You Big Money. IVEY’S "THEY WEAK LONGER” , 1 FISH VEAL CHOICE ROASTS t AND STEAKS 1 1 j ; J. F. Dayvauit & Bpo. Phone* 8$ end 584 PAGE FIVE "“-i 1 : l1tl «* l < 1 I'LJ'IKH I XXJOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO • |! 1 Come and See Our VALENTINES ’ And - ' | Send One to Every Member 1 of Your Family And All Your Friends | We have the Great Gib -1 son Line, which contains I everything you can imagine | | in Valentines. 8 Also Tally Cards, Place a cards, decorations, seals, B party invitations, nut cups B And post cards, 1 Mncatto w I PHONE 579 A A X 90000000000000000000000001 ,■ ■ i ■
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 13, 1925, edition 1
5
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