Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / March 7, 1925, edition 1 / Page 3
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?■< .1- . > ■■ •-• i v ' r Saturday, March 7, 1925 — —-—* 1 n "I . I . 50-54 SOUTH UNION STREET, CONCORD, N. C. !SpI«KM Hf\/, See Our VJa “ J\K Window Apl.! |jf «■»**' Original Styles SucK delightfully feminine Aprons, and so prac ■ tical, too! The styles are “different” and you will like them. There are, several styles—choose one Staunch, well-woven gingham and percale are the materials. The gingham is the favored Amos keag as well as fine, imported weaves. Scout Effective Trimmings If you like the dainty, lace-trimmed apron frock, or if you prefer the neat, tailored type —whatever you want, you can. suiely find it among these Bungalow Aprons. Some are trimmed with eyelet embroidery, with rick-rack, pipings, or with plain or patterned bands. 4 Medium and Large Sizes Sizing lip tile Flapper. Philadelphia Ledger. The flapper is not a modern phenome non; the name is new, but her sisters' played about in Nineveh and Tyre. How ever,the flapper ns a much-advertised •contemporary type has been lauded and derided beyond anything or anybody else. She has been the target of the severest sermons. She is the theme jot solemn commencement addresses. The Sunday newspapers, the theatres, the magazines have found her a staple popular attrac tion. Womens clubs and uplift or ganizations have done a great deal of worrying ; as to her present trend and! her final,-destination. Meanwhile, she j pursues the rollicking, tempestuous tenor of her way, and much of what she really i is gives the lie to a great deal that is! said of her. In a medical convention at Atlantic City she is scientifically explained. She is the victim, it appears, of a malady for which the name flapperitis is coined. MOWN POP BY TAYIvQR { Itt-TRW! - READ AU )\ feCT A pf \ B6Aim ' CONTCSr / SHBEHiiiBMpPgFp • - P That name is indicative t)f a high-strung nervous organism ever kept taut ;aud tenste like a violin string, in the quest of ; fresh stimuli and untried sensation. The flapper, it is held, needs a rest—certain ly the country needs a rest from so much discussion of her. It was the same type ot apparently heedless, thoughtless hoyden that in the war surprised itself and all of us with cool and quiet efficiency and reserves of power little suspected. In a time when many discovered they could do all sorts of things they never though they could do the flapper grandly rose to the crisis. After the war came something of j a relaxation, and that was only to be I expected. There is nothing essentially the matter with the moder ngirl. She, in her time, will come to be considered | old-fogy and conservattive. She must I endure hearing the same accusations hurled at her that slie offers to the older generation now. Os course, we all need to abate the | pace and reduce the stress of “high-, tension” living. The need is not pe culiar to the flapper. Let some of the enormous body of self-annointed censors of the flapper watch their own step, read themselves a lecture' and take a goodly dose of their own medicine, for their own malady is so much like flapperitis that it would need an expert diagonsti cation lo detect the difference. To Be Asked to Strike. Fairmont, W. Va., March 6. —All union and non-union piiners in West Virginia coal fields will be asked to strike on April 1, it was asserted today by Van A. Bittner, general representa tive of the United Mine Workers in this district. New half-dollars to commemorate the (nemorial sculpture on Stone Mountain and provide funds for its completion have the figures of Generals Robert E. I Lee and Stonewall Jackson stamped on , them. THE CONCORD DAItV TRIBUNE 1 NEWS OF THE CHURCHES St. James Lutheran. , Sunday school at 9:45 a. m„ F. R. Shepherd superintendent. Chief service at 11 a. in. Subject of sermon. “Avail ing Steadfastness.” Luther League at 0:3I) p. in. Vespers at 7:30 o’clock. Closing service of the Week of Prayer, j and Self-denial of the Women's Mis j sionary Society. Sermon by Rev. G. jH. Cox, D. 1)., of Salisbury. Jackson Training School. I Service Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock by Rev. L. A. Thomas, pastor of St. J James Lutheran, Church. Concord. j Associate Reformed Presbyterian. i Sabbath school at 10 a. m„ J. E. Me- : Clintoek superintendent. Preaching at 11 a. m. and 7 ij. m. Morning theme: |' “All Power." V. P. O. U. 6p. m. Pray er meeting at 7:30 Wednesday. Special Service. Good crowd expected. Public i invited to all services. ‘ Forest Hill Methodist. Sunday school at 9:45 A. O. Odell superintendent, Stonewall J. Sherrill, ns wxtant superintendent. Morning w-rship and serjnon at 11 o'clock. Subject of ser mon “The Limitations of Life." Epwi nil League meeting at <t:3o. Evening wor ship and sermon at 7:30.. Subject of sermon “Preparation, Parable of the Soil.” Prayer meeting Wednesday eve ning at 7 :15. You are welcome lo wor ship with us. THOS. F. HIGGINS. Pastor. Epworth Methodist. • Sunday school 9:45 a. m. Preaching at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Junior League 3 p. m. Senior League 6:39 p. m. Prayer service, Wednesday, 7 :30 j. m. Choir practice Friday at 7:30 p. n. J. M. VARNER, Pastor. Kerr Street Methodist. Sunday school at 9 :45 by F. M. Sioop. superintendent. Preaching at 11 a. m. by the pastor. Preaching nt 7:39 p. m. by Rev. I). A. Braswell, of the Protest ant Church. All are cordially invited to ntternl these services. C. R. ALLISON, Pastor. All Saints Episcopal. (Rev. ('has. Barker Scovil, Rector) Services Second Sunday in Lent. 8 a. m. Holy Communion. 10 a. m. Church Sunday school and Rector’s Bi ble class. 11 a. in. Morning prayer and sermon by rector. Subject: “To Save That Which Was Lost.’ Wednesday at 7 :30 evening prayer and sermon by spe cial Lenten preacher. The Rev. John L. Jajjkspn, rector St. Martin's Church, Charlotte, will preach Friday. Lenten Study Class, Leader Miss Emma Hall, of Charlotte; at 3 :30 p. m. All are welcome to our services. First Presbyterian. (Jesse C. Rowan, Pastor) Sunday school 9:45, Chas. F. Ritchie Superintendent. Morning worship 11 o'clock. Vesper service 5 p. m. The pastor wiO preach at both services. A cordial: invitation is extended to all to attend all services in this church. Trinity Reformed. The Sunday school and/ men's class meet at '9:45 o’clock. J. O. Moose is superintendent. Members as well as of ficers and teachers are urged tu be on time Services nt 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Sermon by the pastor. Mission Band at 6:30 o'clock. Come and wor ship. I St. Andrews Lutheran. Sunday school at 9“45 a. m. Chief! service at 11 a. m. - Catechetical class at 2 p. m. Light Brigade at 2:39 p. m. Luther Teague nt 6 p. m. Lenten ser vices at 7:3(i p. m. Friday. You are welcome to all services. , Calvary Lutheran. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Light Brigade at: 10:45 a. m. Luther League at (I p. m. Vespers at 7 :00 p. m. Lent en service;on Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. Y’ou are welcome to all services. McGill Street Baptist. (J. ,R.: Pentnff, Ph.D., Pastor) Bible school 9:30, L. E. Polk superin tendent. Tastor teaches Men’s Bible class. Preaching at 11 o’clock by an ex soldier wiio was gased in France. Ser mon at 7 :15 p. m. by pastor on “Christ the Truth" B. Y. P. V. at 6:15. All young people are invited. “Come thou with us.” Methodist Protestant Church. Sunday school at 0:45 a. m. Morning If Back Hurts Begin on Salts Flush Your Kidneys Occasionally by Drinking Quarts of Good Water No man or_ woman can make a mis take by. flushing the kidneys occasion ally, says a well-known authority. Too much rich .food creates acids which clog the kidney pores so that they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the wastp and poisons from the blood. Then you get sick. Rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, constipation, dizzi ness, sleeplessness, bladder disorders often come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in tile kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage, or at tended a sensation of scalding, begin to drink soft water in quantities; also get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a table spoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kid neys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com bined with lithia, and has been used for years to help flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to aotivity, also to help neutralize the acids in the system so they no longer cause irritation, thus often relieving bladder disorders. Tail Salts is inexpensive and can not Injure; makes a delightful effervescent i lithia-water drink, which everyone can take now and then to help keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby often preventing serious kidney compli cations. By all means have your physi cian examine your kidneys at least twice a year. worship at 11. All Christian Endeavor Societies at (t:l;> p. m. Evening wor ship at 7:1 . r > p. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday night at 7:15. Ladies Aaid I Tnes<lay night at 7:30. The publ : e is' cordially invited to attend all our ser vices. PA STOIC ORDERS REMOVAL, OP ENTIRE TOWN Bustling Oil Community in Wyoming { j Must Find New Home in Sixty Pays. | Cheyenne,' Wyo., March (i!—The | town of literally was wipped oft j the map of Wyoming today and its 1 l.fioo residents deprived of their homes I : by a ruling of Federal Judge T. Blake | | Kennedy, who ordered that the entire ! village and its populace must be moved in order to make a clear path for a giant ■of industry—petroleum. I Public buildings, business houses, 1 homes—everything— must go, for Judge , Kenedy deereed that the Ohio Oil Com pany, which leased the land on which the town ; s located from the Govern ment for oil development, is entitled to full possession within 00 days. An April 21. 1024, he held that the town had been established without legal basis, but did not provide for enforcement of a re moval order. Today's decision means that if any sign of the town is left in 00 days, those responsible will be subjected to citation for eontenmpt of court. Lavoye is a modern incarnation of the typical boom mining town of the old Weßt. Prosperity has been general since the town was established in 1020 and the hundreds of men employed in the breath less rush for oil spent as frec'y as they earned. Boomed Town. Lavoye is located in the heart ot the Big Salt Crgek oil field. It puffed up between patches of alkali and snge brush almost, overnight, forty miles north of Casper, when oil drilling call ed hundreds of men -in that vicinity. In 1022 it took on another spurt of grow ing. which continued until 1023, nud it still is the same bustling village, havrng one large mercantile establishment, three weekly newspapers, numerous motion picture theatres, automobile agencies and other institutions of work nml play which the pleasure seekers de mand. Like the mushroom town that it is, its buildings are flimsy—hastily thrown to gether shacks for the most part— and easily can be demolished. It. is expected that, the business interests of the town willoe transferred mostly to Salt Creek, a nearby oil town. Says Lavoye to Fight. Federal Judges Orders. Casper. Wyo., March 6-—The oil town of Lavoye will fight for its exist ence in the United States circuit court of appeals, Alfred S. Beaeh, counsel for the Lavoye Townsite Aflsociatitfn, said here tonight. Final Adjournment Will Probably Oc cur Tuesday Night, as of Wednesday. Raleigh News and Observer. ' With presiding officers of both houses conceding that they cannot clear their calendars in time for adjournment Jjy tonight at midnight, when pay of mem bers ceases by , constitutional limita tion, the probable date of adjournment now appears to be Tuesday night, with the clocks pushed up to show a legisla tive day as of Wednesday. Definite prediction that the end of the session will not come before Tues day night was made last night by Lieut- Gov. J. Elmer Long, president of the Senate, while Speaker Edgar W. Pharr, of the House was somewhat more opti mistic, foreseeing an end df labor by Monday. Although both houses have been holding two or three sessions daily all this week calendars remain con gested. • • The revenue bill has finally been agreed upon but the Nettles bill levying a tax on theatres for Confederate pen sions, which was adopted by the House yesterday, cannot possibly be put through its readings in the Senate be fore the legislative day of Tuesday. The House last night refused to take I a vote on final adjournment on the ground that, today would be time enough to determine the matter. Work on New Passenger Station. Winston-Salem, March 7. —Actual con struction on the new union passenger' station for this city has begun. The concrete forms for the first story of the building are already in place and the ' coicrete poifred. Officials in charge of | the work state that the work of con struction will be rushed as much as pos sible. No woman is as bad as she looks to her enemies. BILIOUSNESS Retired Minister Tells How He Keeps in Good Form With the Assistance of Black-Draught. West Graham, Va.—The Rev. Lewis Evans, a well-known retired minister, now past 80, living here, has a high opinion of Black- Draught, which he says he has taken when needed, for 25 years. "For years I had been suffering with my liver," he says. “Some times the pain would be very In tense and my back would hurt all the time. Black-Draught was the first thing I found that would give me any relief. "My liver has always been slug gish. Sometimes It gives me a lot of trouble. I have suffered a lot with it—pains In my side and back, and bad headache, caused from ex treme biliousness. “After I found Black-Draught, I would begin to take it as soon as I felt a spell coming on and It re* lieved the cause at once. I can recommend It to anybody suffer ing from liver trouble. A dose or two now and then keeps me in good form.” Made from selected medicinal roots and herbs, and containing no dangerous mineral drugs, Black- Draught is nature’s own remedy for a tired, lazy liver. NC-166 Hints From a House - Wife's IWfcACT tXoiy Dishes From JL/% East and West TURKISH-AMERICAN PII.AF This near-Turkish national dish proves that one need not go to the Near East to enjoy fCt savory cooking. Select a pound and a half of shoulder of lamb or vea,l and have It cut in convenient pieces for serving. Place the meat in an . enameled ware stewing kettle, cov er it with three cupfuls of boiling water, and add one and a half teaspoonfuls of salt and a teaspoon ful of chili powder. Bring to a boil, skim, and simmer for one hour. Pour the broth Into an enameled ware double boiler and slowly add half a cupful of un cooked rice. Then add half-a cup ful of cleaned dried currants, which will not affect or be affected by the surface of the enameled ware utensil, which is impervious to the action of fruit acids. Cook until the rice and currants are tender. Meanwhile, melt four tablespoon fuls of drippings or other fat in a pan, lay in the .cooked meat and brown slowly. Pile the meat in the center of a hot platter and sur round with rice. Curry or saffron may be used in place of the chili powder, if preferred, cr as a var iation. DELICIOUS CABBAGE ROLLS Vegetables are being used in Very appetizing ways nowadays, and cabbage, too, has such pos uibillties. And as cold cooked meat Is employed the housewife will find it a very adaptable dish for utilizing the leftovers of a roast. Chop one cupful cold meat, one medium sized onion, one green pepper, and add two cupfuls of mashed potatoes. Season with ■age and celery salt and shape the mixture into small rolls. Roll each of these In a cabbage leaf (wilted by placing in boiling water for five minutes) and place them In an enameled ware baking dish. Add sufficient boiling water or stock to cover them about half. Bake for forty-five minutes, or until the cab bage leaves are tender. These cabbage rolls should be handled carefully and gently while serving so that their appearance is not marred. The enameled ware baking dish is especially suitable because it is; so china-like and dainty in appear- i anee that it can be brought to the! I ‘able and „*<••<* as n sen dish THE OLD HOME TOWN , BY STANLEY fel— Efc -k’O U)' fi JIM WATSON HAS BEEN KEPT Rtc.HT BUSY. J JIM HAS TURNED OUT SOME vZj&i EAU NICE WORK, i,— „ «,«■»««. ■■ s-«,. J | NEW FOOTWEAR FOR | THE NEW SEASON (|i Not for one day but for all days we offer great Values for the X ]l| money. That's why you should come now to make a selection. New X i|i arrivals almost daily. All widths. All sizes. | PARKER'S SHOE STORE !| j PHONE 897 AND SAVE g THE PEKNI COLUMN G ETSI HI TII PAGE THREE TRY THIS BUTTERSC6TOH LAYER PIE This pie differs from the ordin ary kind, in that It is made up like cake. Caramelize one quarter of a cup of granulated sugar in an enameled ware saucepan, over a slow fire. Watch carefully and stir so that it does not “catch.” Cream to gether one quarter cupful butter and one third cupful flour. Add one cupful brown sugar, three egg yolks, well beaten, and one-half teaspoonful salt. Add two cup fuls hot milk and the caramelized sugar. Place in an enameled ware double boiler which will Insure the delicate color and flavor of thl» creamy filling. Stir constantly tin til thickened. Cut three rounds about a quarter of an inch thick of a flaky pastry to fit the bottom of the pie plate and prick well with a fork. Bake in a hot oven until delicately browned. When the pastry and filling are cool put the plo together like a layer cake with filling on top also. Cover with a meringue made of the three egg whites beaten with six tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar. Drown slightly in a moderate oven. I“YE OLDE ENGLISH” PORK PIE Meat pies owe their distinction to a rich stock Or gravy combined with fruit. Although they are all of English origin, they are becom ing popular In American homes and are always well received dur ing these brisk days. Remove the bone from two pounds of a loin of pork (from the neck end). Then cut the meat into thin slices and dust them with salt, pepper and nutmeg. Line n deep enameled ware baking dish with plain pastry, and fill with al ternate layers of meat and tart sliced apples, which cannot im pair the vitreous surface of the enameled ware. Sprinkle the apples lightly with sugar, and use me .t for the top layer. Pour over all, three quarters of a cupful of rich brown stock or boiling water and a tablespoonful of melted butter. Cover with a top crust in which vents have been made and brush over with the beaten yolk of an egg, so that the top will be shiny and nicely browned. Bake i; in a moderate oven for an hour | and a half. Potatoes can be added, If de i s'red.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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March 7, 1925, edition 1
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