Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / April 1, 1925, edition 1 / Page 5
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WUMttjr, Xpr9 :p»925 r ■■■>■ -.r?'l’rrrrt Slender Line Is Popular < I MsßtißSßsm' : ' TH £• slenderizing line of this silk gown, printed in navy hlue and white, should endear It to the hearts of all those women who can't quite decide *o take no food with their meals The veslee and front pan "I are of pleated georgette crepe <*>* •there Is a collar of ecru lace. It | Is caught together at the front with an ornament of beads and two long .' tassels. Helping Bos Companies. . Raleigh, March 31.—The State corpo ration commission is wrestling with a new problem these days, that of help ing companies to settle their dif ferences as to the schedules they will adopt. The eommmssion plans, as uear - ly as possible, to have the bus companies arrive at their own conclusions. How .lssue absolute orders. Gastonia’s $200,000 School Bends Win. y Gastonia, Marcit 30.—Gastonia voters today carried a bond isuse of $200,000 for school purposes, a new grammar school structure, an addition to another and for improvements in playgrounds and athletic field at the high school, in cluding the erection of a stadium. The registration was 600 and nearly 500 voted for the issue. Mi's. Emma J. Harvat, mayor of lowa City for three years, has given such gen eral satisfaction in her conduct of the office that she has been renominated for another term. CHEST COLDS Redden the skin by the use of hot applications. Then massage briskly •with Vicks, spread Vicks on thickly and cover with hot flannel doths. WICKS w Vapoßub Oon tr Million Jm Vnd Ttartr l \ - r t ■ B -y» TV -JK Bold By H BELLHARRIfi \ Vttt- $ ERAL PARLOR * Day Phone 640 INight* Phones 360-150 L t PERSONALS j Mbs. W. I. Little ha# returned from Atdievillo where she visited several days. ~• • • 8. V. Brumley, of Spartanburg,- is in j the city today on business. , Mrs. Earl Bluine left today for ' hor | home in Fletcher. She was called home on the account of the illness of her sis ter. •• ’ • • • • Mrs. John McClellan has returned front a visit with her daughter, Mrs. £>. P. Grant, in McAdenville. • 4 O Mrs. W. P. Mabrey and daughter, El len, Mfss Mildred Suther and Mrs. W. Ci Warfick, of Jilt. Pleasant, are today attending the Classical Woman’6 Mis sionary Society in Greensboro. Ellen Mabrey will be one of the speakers at the banquet tonight. • • • Miss Helen Misenbeimer, of the music al faculty of Mont Amoena Seminary, spent Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. J. P. Cook where she attended the meeting of the Mueic Club. • * *' Mrs. H. W. Blanks returned this af ternoon from Monroe, La., where she has been for several weeks with her father, who was dangerously ill. The condition of Mr. H. H. Buie, her father,’ is improved. • ► * Misß Nellie Walters spent Monday night with Misses Nanny and Mary Troutman. * * * Col. H. B. Varner, proprietor of the ne wheatre here, and Mr. Meriwether, his manager, were in the city Tuesday. Alexander-Howell. The following invitations have been issued: Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Howell request the honor of your presence at the marriage of their daughter Lela Drusilla and Mr. James Leon Alexander on Tuesday, the fourteenth of April nineteen hundred and twenty-five at twelve o’clock First Baptist .Church Concord, North Carolina Accompanying card : At homo after April the twentieth Virginia Apartments, Charlotte, North Carolina. Tbe Woman’s Club. The April business meeting of the Woman’s Club will be held Thursday afternoon, April 2nd, at 8:30 o’clock at Central grammar school. This is to be a very important meeting as the election of officers for the l coming club year will be held. PRESIDENT. Efforts to Procure Ship Line For North Carolina. In the recent tour which was taken by North Carolinians to Bermuda, ef forts were made to interest the trade development board of that island in the ejjlablisluneut of & ship, ]iu£f to North Carolirla. The’'following letter received by H. W. Blanks shows v that the matter is being considered. The text of the let ter is as follows: Mr. H. W. Blanks, Chamber of Commerce, Concord, N. C. Dear Mr. Blanks: The Bermuda Trade Development Board has been considering the possibil ities of establishing a steamship service between a southern port and Bermuda. The recent successful voyage of the S. S. Fort Hamilton from Wilmington, N. C., has been noted with interest and the board would be pleased to be advised whether your chamber feel that it would be passible to establish a permanent serv ice between one of tbe ports of North Carolina and Bermuda. Yours very truly. JOSEPH J. OUTERBRIDGE, Secretary. MRS. GUILFOL FAILS TO MAKE APPEARANCE Bend Forfeited and Capias Issued. — McKinnon Hearing Postponed. W. T. Bost in Greensboro News. Raleigh, March 31. —Absence of MW. T. J. Guilfoil, defendant in a police court charge of immorality in which Rep resentative D. P. McKinnon, of RobCSon, is involved with her, caused continuance of the case this morning and the hearing will be held Thursday. Counsel defending Sir. McKinnon had counted on Mrs. Guilfoil’s presence to perfect their defence. Mr. McKinnon stood his ground and will resist an alle gation of immorality. He will offer evidence of other witnesses that the little drinking imrty of which he was a member resulted in his complete knock-out and that so far as he was concerned, that was the end of his wrong-doing. He denies any knowledge whatsoever of Mrs. Guilfoil’s presence in the room in which his friend carried him. undressed him and put him to bed. And the young Robe sonian was placed there solely because his companion could neither walk him nor carry him home. Mrs. Guilfoil was represented in many moods as the hearing drew near. Sat unday nigh she and her husband were packing up and ready to take the steam ers, Sunday night they were still here and standing their ground. Monday , they were moved to travel again and Monday night they were supposed to be in -town. Today the SIOO bond was forfeited and a capias was issued. The state, replying on the testimony of three policemen that the pair were in the same bedroom and that Mrs. Guil foil fled when they flashed a light on them, will press the Immorality charge. For that reason Sirs. Guilfoil’s testi mony would have been important. It is very unlikely that she will remain to offer any, or that the state can get her back here for the purpose of standing trial Mumatz Begum Will Be Disfigured For Life. P ; -(fy the Associated Press) Bombay, Apr# I.—The facial wound suffered by Mumtuz Begum in the fight | on Malabar Hill last January will dis figure her for life, a doctor testified to day in the trial Os the nine men charged with attempting to abduct the dancing girl for the Mara rajah of Indore, in J whose court she was formerly the favor-1 j ite. i 1 ■ ■ fly-'- •; \:•.• BPrPPP THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE MEMORY OF JOHN C. CALHOUN HONORED Matey Pilgrims Oome to Pay Honor to ■ StAtaamtm’o Memory. Pendleton,..B. ft, March 31.—The old home of John C. Calhoun, near this place, was the mecca for many pilgrims today, who came to pay tribute to the memory of the great Southern states man on the seventy-fifth anniversary of his deatk For many years the old Calhoun homestead has been carefully ! looked after by the trustees of Clemson , College, which owes Its existence large ly to the fact that the great statesman's ! ' eon-in-law in his vlill .left all Calhoun i j grand property of 800 acres, J together with the historic homestead and j fifty odd thousand dollars, 'to the State ] of South Carolina to partially endow an j industrial and Agricultural college in j which the sons of farmers of the state i could obtain an education. The old horns tead has been preserved ] much as Calhoun left it. The same i furniture, pictures, books and ornaments j that he used in his leisure summer hours | are to be seen today just as he left i them. In the rear of the dwelling, the j small frame structure, used by the ora- , tor as a law office in his early career, and i later as a study, is also in a good stale j of preservation. John C. Calhoun, with Henry Clay i and Daniel Webster, were the great fig- j ures of the first half century of Amerl- J can constitutional history, whose names I are identified with the majority of the j most pregnant and Jjietfuhesque incidents , of that period. EAch was a giant ih 1 the arena of political debate, and for a \ long nurfber of' years each at home time was pitted against another in a genuine battle of giants. Each of these remark able men cherished an ambition to be President of the United States, but each failed to attain that exalted station. Calhoun, however, served twice as vice president. Mr. Calhoun began his political career as a member of the Democratic party, but in the course of his long period of public activity he found himself allied at dis- \ ferent times with all the other parties, i He was the bravest and bitterest foe that Andrew Jackson had for a number of \ years, and the spirited conflict that these two memorable characters waged is one of the most sensational in American po litical history. Jackson at one time is found threatening to hang Calhoun, and Calhoun is found denouncing Jackson personally in the Senate as an instru ment of corruption and tyranny. Calhoun's dominant characteristic was his loyalty to his native state and to ] the interests of the South. He was one of the earliest and most vigorous advocates of the doctrine of free trade, ] which almost resulted in the separation i of South Carolina from the Union in the 1 early ’3os. He led the successful fight \ for the annexation of Texas, which re- i suited in the Mexican war. and he was j an uncompromising defender of the in- ( stitution of slavery. I During the last years of his life Oal- ] houn was indefatigable in his efforts to i form such a union of the slave-holding < states as should check the abolition move- ] rnent and neutralize what he described i as the constantly growing superiority of 1 the North. He attributed this growth ] to unjust political conditions, which had i transformed the nation from a federal l republic into a huge democracy, and his ' plan is fwM •‘tosjiawe.jieen the formation i of a new compact two presi dents should be chosen, each to approve of the acta of Congress before they could become laws, one to be selected by the 1 North and the other by the South. ( Calhoun’s last public utterance, after i which he was carried exhauted from the 1 chamber of the United States Senate to ] his deathbed, was on the general sub- i ject. 1 50000000000000000000000000 STATIONERY A Big Asortment jj ! ]!j Just What You Want !j ■ || Clines Pharmacy; j | j ’ Phone 383 See Our New j Wrist and Strap Watches I VOU will be interested in these |j A new designs in ElginWatches. n These new models represent the | H finest development of the art of | II watchmaking. And while they are | unusually beautiful, no sacrifice I has been made in timekeeping accuracy nor in the quality which assures long years of dependable show |lm** models to anyone STARNES-MILLER PARKKR CO. Jewafers and Optomet- j rista | • { * 4 i iJUjj j r 111 iil - i —; I A lock of approved type is a 8 practical addition to your 8 car equipment, It prevents 8 damage to the car by joy 8 riding amateur thieves, and ' entitles you to a lower prem ium 1 on your theft insurance. ! It pays for itself in this re- ! spect —and protects your ; car. A professional crook \ wilj steal your car in 1 spite of a lock if he has ! marked it for that pur- | 8 pose. You have small ] j chance of recovering it. > I Insurance cover the 8 ; ; loss—get it before the [ J car is stolen. ij ! Get automobile insurance ! I from Johij K .Patterson & ] ; Company covering fire* theft j i collision, liability and ! | property damage. Jno. K. Patterson j & Company i “Consult Your Agent as You Would ! [ Your Doctor or Lawyer J i j I Our Private , Chapel We have always extended ![! our efforts toward making jij the memory of the funeral '[• service ever sacred and prec- j|! ious. Only the finest and Ji| most modern equipment j | could aid us to attain that ! > I desire. ?[ j |i[ Our building, personnel ]![■ and equipment>«has become i|t known throughout this com- ji! munity. We serve ably and ]! well. 1 1 Wilkinson’s j|j Funeral Home ijj Phone No. 9 ![ Any Hour, D f ay or Night ||[ 00000000000000000000000000 I Saturdays Specials in All the Very j LATEST FOOTWEAR T RUTH-KESLER SHOI .STORE g 31 South Union St. Phone 116 fi lOOQOOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOeoOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCX FEEDS! FEEDS! FEEDS! | Pure Fffed For Your Glrickens and Your Bt6ck When Yo« { Feed From the Checkerboard Bags . j; Don’t let your baby chickens die when you can get j I'/ Feed that; will- grow without loss of,a chick. }! \ Call us and we will deliver the kind of Feed you want. 9 CASH FEED STORE uiii'iuuiiiiiiiiiiimiiin'iii'mm m,, J ~rn, n Miss Martin’s Death Was Probably Hro , Salisbury, March 30.—Miss Mary Mar tin dieii last' night at'the home of Prank B. Brown. She bad been ill for bodjo time and several .days ago suffered a fall which probably hastened the end. Miss Martin was a native of England: she had lived in Salisbury for forty years, coming here with family of the late Captain Prank Brown. The funeral takes place frotp'tfce Brown home Tuesday afternoon at 4 o’clock. FEEDS Dairy Feed Chickens feed | Horse and Mule Feed ! Oats, Ship Stuff, Bran, Timothy [. Hay, Clover Hay, Meadow Hay, ; Shucks, and Straw. I We have large ware rooms just [ filled with the very best feeds, i Our feeds are all put up in Plain \ Bags.. No trash or grit and are i sold on their merits; instead of i fancy bags. The price is cheaper. | Cline & Moose | jnimmui f 1 EVERY WOMAN IS A RAINBOW |J and to match the varied | B hues of her changeable self ; |j D’Orsay suggests these sev i | eral sympathetic perfumes: Toujours Fidele ! Fleur De Franc Chevalier I Gibson Drag Store j ! 1 The Rexall Store it , , ■ >»■' W”' ll'. Fresh | GARDEN ; SEEDS in Bulk | PEARL DRUG CO. Phone 22 On the Square 3=—=a=g - ■■■ rrsr iJ Boooooooooooooooooopoooo® HkgMyJßtefcf' ’' * | .ffSbUj I ■§ |( § O fl 3g • US ■ wm noyance of carrying one © clothier’s tie counter? 8 | w nen we Duy shirts we buy ties—and vice versa. jjj ![[ For Spring we bought both—lots of them. 8 Ji [ Here now—but they won’t be here long when the news ] I ii spreads! I Bates Street and Eclipse Shirts $1.50 to $5.00 j ' ; ; Four-in-Hand and Bqw Ties 50c to $3.00 j 1 j i New Spring Suits $30.00 to $40.00 ]| Browns-Cannon Co. WHERE YOU GET YOUR MONEY’S WORTH !j _-----~~r ■ -J Who Said There Is No Poultry Mar- j ket in Concord? jj Get rid of your surplus hens now! ~ i! v ?;;i | e Price will be lower after Easter. We don t want a car load of hens in one day but we’ve only bad too jjj nfrany twice. One time we were out of coops and the next time out of Kj money. We have some money now and plenty of coops so let us have ■=! the hens. §& We guarantee you 20c per pound for all hens weighing 4 pounds and |i|J over and 17 l-2c per pound for small hens delivered to us between now fl and Tuesday, April (ith. Will pay 40c per pound for Friers and 25c fl to 30c for broilers. \ fl I Why consign your poultry when you can sell to us at a guaknteed H price? .« i i C. H. BARRIER & CO. I DODGE BROTHERS I TYPE-B SEDAN ; | Popular with women because the seats and springs arc restful, and i i j [ because the lines of the Car have genuine distinction. O Popular with men because the body is all-steel, the finish Dodge Broth- I | 1 1 1 ers enduring black enamel, the .upholstery genuine leather—factors 1 1 1 i which make for long life at lower first and after cost. ! Corl Motor Co. jjj PHONE 630 | New Today-Blond Satin ■! . ~ i This morning’s express brings to us a shipment of this popular pump of | high grade Blond and Satin, blond k : d‘ trim with neat strap across in » step and around ankle fastened with small bow. p This pump carried the new Spanish heel, a beautiful new shoe, very striking, moderately priced 00 j IVEY’S I ‘THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES” 1 Nice Fresh Shad Dressed Chiekens i Real Sheep Veal | J* F. Dayvault & Bro. i Phones 85 and 5*4 '' 11, H.^gj The Penny Ads. Get Results—Try Them* ■ -1 .-j PAGE FIVE SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOi POTTERY j! New Shipment of ; 11 the Celebrated ! \ | Rosecraft Pottery Justin ; » Including flower bowls, vas- a i i es, pots, wall pockets, coitt- X J | porte sets, bud vases and 5 ; j baskets, in mariy designs and o i i colors. We have just the X ! piece you need far your 5 Easter Flowers and our Q prices are much lower than X ! ever before on this grade of x ! goods. Q ; See our window display— a , You’ll see something there x I | yo uwant. 2 I I
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 1, 1925, edition 1
5
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