?■< .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 p. m. Evening wor ship at 7:1 . r > p. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday night at 7:15. Ladies Aaid I Tnes