PAGE TWO
mmm****'-"* T ■
PENNY COLUMN
IS.wwMi far
W H?s* an'oth ne 3?t-p.
CAImOTK SAXITa’rY
while they are cheap. Lippard &
Witt SUd Vegetables? Berts," ' Carrots.
new potatoes, spinach, cjjfcy, lettuce,
tomatoes, cabbage, string sff»ns. squash,
* spring onions, eranberrfe*j Lip
pard A Barrier. '“3-lt-p.
FToe . Free Balloons and Chewing Gum
to all children. Favors for the Grown
ups tomorrow at the Philips Grocery
fe v. Co., West Corbin St., opposite Con
cord Steam Bakery. Phone 170.
'For Rent—One Good House, Close In.
Wanted —three Rooms Furnirtied for
housekeeping, ready to move in,
nothing to buy but eats. Mrs. Proc
tor. Boa 474- 2-2 t-p.
S frertT FMg Roe Shad. Buck Shad and
; croakers. Plioue 510 and 525. Chas.
C. Graeber. 3-2 t-p.
Fancy Granges. Grapefruit, Apples and
jgf bananas. W. J. Glass & Son. 3-lt-p.
Salesman Wanted—No Experience Nec
essary to earn $75.00 weekly selling
utility suits and top coats tailored to
measure $12.50. Fastest and easiest
selling line ever advertised. Nogar
k. Clothing Company. Greensboro, N. C.
' Mar. 31-3-7-10-14-17-21-p.
jfl, Tar Tin Work, Roflng. Guttering. Re
pairing, phone 773. Arthur Eudy, 73
SlcGill Street. 2 13t-p.
Listen Ladies. Six Sales "Artnit”
dresses net SIO.OO. Experience un
necessary to secure orders, displaying
garments brings them. Entirely new,
_ big demand, sensational price. Xogar
j] (Nothing Mfg. Co.. Greensboro, X. C.
|i 8 2-9-16-23-30-p.
Splendid New Hats—Hats $4.95, $3.95.
two dollars. Miss Brachen’s Bonnet
Shop. 2-St-p.
Fish, Fish. Ye*. We Have Them.
Croakers, flounders, haddock, roe shad
and buck shad. Phone us. Ed M. Cook
Company. 2-2 t-p.
For Sale—l «-Hoom House on Y’ance
St., modern conveniences: 1 practical
' ly new 5-rooin house on Carolina ave
nue; 1 practically new 5-room house
on Fink St., Modern conveniences; 2
new 4-room houses on Odell St., 15
, nice vacant lots on Odell St. See D.
C A. McLaurin. Phone 435. 31-lit-p.
I,; ■
A Fast and Flagg's Cotton letter. I
|s *£ New York. April 2.—Tlie continued I
tfteadiness in cotton in fm-e of renewed |
disturbance in other major markets can
“ properly be interpreted as conclusive evi
dence of a sold out ami in fact oversold
tnditiin. Prices have not advanced
d It v is probably true that after re
ceiving so severe a shock to their conti
iijcnce by exi>eriences elsewhere buyers
may he slow- to enter the cotton market
M»d will require very convincing reason
for doing so.
,1 Meantime, admitting that the outlook
l»i Texas has been improved by recent
fjlins over much <f that state, it looks
like that was well discounted by the
; break and furthermore these rains will
liardly go very deep or provide more than
surface moisture needed to work the
land and germinate the seed. The en
durance' test will come with the hot
summer weather and judging by expert
‘ Testimony there is serious doubt if re
sults will be favorable enough to give
* reliable prospect for the fourteen mil
lion crop that will almost Certainly be
I The New EFIRD Store 1
l, : THE PRE-EASTER SALE '
AT EFIRD’S
MR tt.- ■ I
Is Going Big With Extra
| Specials Added Every Day 9
I Don’t Miss the Bargains We |
|;f Are Offering in Our Base- j
■B ment During This Sale
I S
i BEI -" ’ r ItSLV \
li||B r 1
8 i
SPECKLED TROFT. SHAD AND
URGAKEKiS. SANITARY GRO
CERY CO. 3-lt-p.
Lost Between Charlotte and Wadevillc
on Thursday. April 2nd, tan leather
handbag containing various articles,
mostly baby clothes. Finder please
notify Rev. L. Cook Campbell, Pine
tops, N. C. 3-2 t-p.
Another Lot of Those Good Country
hams. Remember we cut them, W. J.
Qlats & Son. 3-lt-p.
New Grocery Store Opens Saturday
morning opposite Concord Steam Bak
ery on West Corbin street with a com
plete Hue of staple and fancy groceries.
Philips Grocery Co., ft. J. Phillips,
proprietor. Phone 179. 3-lt-p,
Choice Cuts cf Lamb and Veal. Phone
510 and 525. Chas. O. Graeber.
3-2 t-p.
Epileptics—At Last a Treatment Which
stops seizures from first day. No bro
mides, narcotics. Guaranteed. Infor
mation free. Hunter Laboratories. 207
Main, Little Rock. Ark. 3-lt-p.
S. C. Rhode Island Red Eggs For Hatch
ing. SI.OO for 15. Jesse R. McClellan,
East Depot St. Sl-tf-p..
Lost —A Pocketbook Between the Epis
copal Church and the High School, con
taining $6 and majl addressed to Mrs.
J. C. Gibson. Reward offered to per
son finding. Return to Mrs. J. C.
Gibson. 2-lt-c.
—■— • ■ V —. -*
Tomatoes, Nice Fancy Tomatoes. Phone
us, Ed M. Cook Co. 1-t-p.
Barred Rock Eggs For Hatching SI.OO
for 15. Mrs. H. A. Graeber. Phone
340. 3-3 t-p.
Wanted—Women to Make Money at
■home. Plain home sewing. Xo can
vassing. To prevent curiosity seek
ers, send ten cent (coin) for samples
and particulars. Success Sewing Sys
tem. Box 207, Long Branch, X. J.
2-2 t p.
Tomatoes. Tomatoes, Big Lot Fancy Ripe
tomatoes. Phone us, Ed M. Cook Co.
2-2 t-p.
For Sale—One Ford Coupe. 1928 Model;
one Willys-Knight touring: two Essex
coaches, one Buick touring, one Star
touring, one Essex touring. Concord
Motor Company. 31-st-p.
Visiting Cards, For Gentlemen or Ladies
or children, printed from a beautiful
new type, Invitation Text, 50 for SI.OO.
or 100 for $1.50. Work done on a few
hours notice. Times-Tribune Office.
00, $3.75. Times-Tribune office.
For Rent—Two Furnished Rooms With
bath 93 East Deiwt Street. Phone
3t®. 30-Bt-p.
1 needed to meet requirements.
Advices from goods markets are a
‘ shade better but still lack much of be
ing brilliant, thoitgh there seems no good
1 reason to doubt that domestic consump
tion will reach the expected six mil
: liens wlrile indications point strongly to.
eight millions for exports. The basis
continues very firm for all desirable types
and there is no suggestion of distress
cotton proving anywhere. Profession
al traders my be encouraged by outside
1 developments to put prices under more
pressure forcing a temporary recession
but it is though that a good many trade
buying orders would be Uncovered just
1 below these levels.
‘ POST AXD FLAGG.
i
• Germans to Study American Agriculture.
Berlin. April 1 ( By the Associated
t Press).—An official German agricultural
: commission of four experts, the first to
travel abroad since the world war. will
» sail from Bremen April 2 for a six mouths
- study of the progress made in American
• agriculture during the past ten years.
I'.:."!".':. ■BBiflMf,'-,'l'i I■ -agMffr-- iltlS
f IN AND ABOUT THE CTTY J||
BLASTER SERVICES AT TRINITY
REFORMED CHURCH ANNOUNCED
Last Serv ices In OM Church Building to
Be Held Easter Sunday Night.
The pastor of Trinity Reformed
Church announces services for the Easter
season as follows:
Palm Sunday: The preparatory service.
Sermon. ‘T Am the Bread of Life.”
Evening service. Sermon, '‘The Living
Water.”
Weednesday, Thursday and Friday at
7:45 Rev. J. D. Andrew, of the Faith
charge. Rowan county, will preach. Song
service each night, led by Mrs. J. B.
Womble,
Easter Sunday : Early service. Holy
Communion. Service at 11 a. m. Ser
mon, ‘"I Am the Resurrection and the
Life.” Holy Communion!. Evening serv
ice at 7:30. This will be the last serv
ice in the old church. The property
was sold a year ago to the Cabarrus Mo
tor Company. They have called for the
church building. It was through their
courtesy and goodwill that the congre
gation was granted to use the building
over the Easter season.
The members and the friends are re
quested to make these services during
Holy Week. Palm Sunday to Easter Sun
day. full of blessing to all.
The Sunday school and worship will
be held in Corbin street school till the
new church is ready for entrance. The
annual meeting of the Classis will con
vene in the old Lower Stone Church in
Rowan county May sth. April is the
last month of the year. The church will
make effort to receive all financial obli
gations prior to April 2Cth, when the
books for the year will be closed.
W. C. LYERLY. Pastor.
HOME OF WALTER LIT AKER
BURNED THURSDAY AFTERNOON
No One Was at Home at the Time of the
Fire and Nothing Was Saved From tile
Flames.
The home of Walter Litaker. colored,
was burned shortly after one o'clock
Thursday afternoon in a blaze which
while lasting only a very short while,
burned the whole house practically to the
ground.
Xo oue was at home at the time the
fire caught. I.itakcr, who is employed at
the Central Barber Shop, was at work:
h ! s wife was in Slmnkletown, where she
teaches school, and his three chi'dren
were all in Logan school.
It was not known how the fire start
ed but when first discovered, it wa« burn
ing briskly in the back of the house. By
iln* time the fire truck reached the scene
of the fire, having beeti called by neigh
bors. the whole house wfts a seething miss
>f flames ami the two adjoining houses
were burning slightly.
The firemen quickly extinguished the
blaze on the neighboring houses mtd 'H-rt
very short while had the fire under con
trol iu the Walter Litaker home. Noth
ing was saved from the house, however,
since the pine of which it w.ts built,
burned very, rapidly before the firemen
I'ould reach the house.
Tlie house had been built only three
years, and was jpjrtiaßy-. covered. j>y in
surance. the amount said to have been
$1,200. The home was on Uncohf street.
>V. L. POTEAT TO SPEAK HERE
THURSDAY AT Y MEETING
Informal Reception To Be Held —Five j
New Directors to Be Elected at the I
Meeting.
Preparations now underway indicate
that til? membership meeting at the Y
next Thursday night will be one of the
outstanding events of its kind staged ill
Concord recently.
Dr. W. L. Potent, president of Wake
Forest College, has been secured to make
the principal address of the evening. Dr.
Potent is well known throughout the
state and the South as an orator and
as a liberal thinker. Oil several man
sions he has engaged in evolution de
bates with other prominent pastors of
North Carolina.
The affair is to be held at X o'eloek
and is to be a rather informal recep
tion. A number of {lie prominent wom
en of the city have been asked to act
as hostesses. A musical program is be
i ing arranged and the Hi-Y girls' rlnbs
I are asked as special guests.
I The business of the evening is the
I election of five new members to the
| board sis directors to fill the vacancy
| left by the expiration of tlie meniber-
I ships of five of the old board.
* Invitations Will be sent out the early
i part of next week.
i Red Cross Still Appealing for Funds* for
Storm Sufferers.
i. Contributions for the storm sufferers
1 of the middle west are eomiug in slow
| ly. It is not because people are heart
less. It is because the trouble is sev
eral hundred miles away and all are so
j busy with our own affairs we do not
i use our imaginations to picture the ap
• palling need. Concord lias been asked
,by the National Red Cross to help. A
) few people are responding. Below* are
1 tlie names so far and the amount they
i have given;
Mrs. George Richmond SIO.OO
George Richmond 2.00
George Cannon . 1.00
i Mrs. W. F. Goodman 5.00
' H. S. Williams 5.00
| A Friend 1.00
S A Friend 1.00
1 Please mail checks to the treasurer of
I this found. Mr. L. D. Coltrane, at the
I Concord National Bank.
1 Wm. A. JENKINS, Chairman,
J Cabarrus Chapter A. R. C.
2 Tlie first efieese factory in Wisconsin
iji 1864,
WAS A “BEAR CAT”
B ”M.v wife was never an angel, but
I after five years of liver and stomach
| trouble she became a 'bear cut. - ' No
l doctor or medicine helped her and we
j though there was no help for her. Our
j grocer told me of Mayr’s Wonderful Rcul
g edy. which had helped him for same
X trouble, so I brought home a bottle, but
5 she promptly threw it outr I got it
8 back an dafter a week coaxi-d her into
a taking it. She is now enjoying the
B best of health and disposition.” It ia
81 a simple, harmless preparation that re
(M moves the catarrhal mucus from the 1«-
5 tdstlna! tract and althys the infiaratna
-12"
“ Drug Store had druggist* everywhere
-'i.■s#>* .. *■■■ •,‘V'
THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBW&
SENIOR RECITATION CONTEST 1
AT HIGH SCHOOL TONIGHT J
Bays’ Glee Cluh aod High School Or ||
chest ra to Rattier Selections During M
Evening. II
The anuual recitation contest fort Tie [1
Junior Order Medal will be held tonight M
at the High School at 8 o'clock, members ll
of the Senior Class contesting. The pub-j|
lie is invited to atttttd.
Iu addition to the regular program of II
recitations, other attractions have bech|l
placed on the iwogrpm. The High J
School Orchestra wfll play selectiohb [I
throughout the evening and the Boys’ll
Glee Club will ring several number*. 9
The class of ’25 will start the evening’*]!
entertainment by singing the class song. |J
The medal is given each year by Jun-jl
ior Order No. 25 t« the member of the II
Senior class who delivers the best reci-jl
tatiou in a public'Contest. The programj|
this year is as follows; 1
Class Song—Seniors. I
“March. Metropblftkn Life" (A seller) —-n
High School Orchestri. I
1. Why Scheffer Did Not Play—Ruth jl
McClure. v Li > 1
2. The Soft Spot in B-606—Dorothy M
Black. ) I
3. The Sweet Girl Graduate — Maude f!
Miller. !|
“War March of the Priests” from 11
Atlialia (Mendelssohn) —High SchoolH
Orchestra. I
4. The Down-Hill Road.—Anueto Um-jl
berger. I
5 Clierokce Rose* —Conlelia Ritchie. 11
6 Cigarette's Ride and Death—Mil-ll
dred I’ropst. I
•'Bendeineer's Stream” (Tom Moore)]!
—Boy's Glee Club. jl
7 From a Far Conntry-r-V, : .olet Tur-ji
ner. I
9 The Wounded Canadian —Nancy jl
Lentz. I
“Sweet Melody” Waltz (Asoher) —High II
School Orchestra. ! I
LITTLE DAMAGE DONE FRUIT I
IN COUNTY BY COLD SNAP I
G. W. Fant of Raleigh. Spends Wednes- I
day in Concord and Vicinity Inspect- 1
ing Fruit. I
Recent frosts have injured very little J
of the fruit in the county, is the opinion I
of G. IV. Fant. of the Plant Disease Ex- I
tension Department at Raleigh, who was I
a visitor in Concord and vicinity Wed- J
nesdny, spending the day making an iu- I
spection of the orchards and the condition 1
of the fruit. I
Mr. Fant made a thorough inspection 1
of seven orchards aniLfound serious dam- I
age at the John CisTSfe‘ee, Mt. Pleasant, tj
Route 1. The fruit in, the other parts of j
the county had suffered little loss from tj
the cold sunp. I
(hchards visited weie; 11. B. Iley, j
Harrisburg. Route 2, J. Ivey CliHe. Con- ]
cord Route 1: G. M.. Batte, Concord; j
Philip M. Baiiingcr, Concord Route 5; I
Cmiuty Home Orphogd: John Cox. Mt. ]
I’leasiuit Route ,1. and M. L. Ivluttz, j
UiK-kwell Route 2.
Woman Evangelist Conducting Meeting I
at Westford thurcli. J
Mi's. O. i’. Ader.'Tßfe <tt the Method- 1
ist pastor,at Ms. Hlflly. l is conducting a j
series of revival; niqetgu(|s at Westford. j
Methodist Church thin, week and is meet- j
ing with such success that the meeting ]
will probably be continued on through i
! next week. '
j Mrs. Ader for fifteen years before .
marriage was a noted woman evangelist 1
and persons who have Uenvd her at ]
Westford sat that she is a forceful J
speaker. About 25 confesisons have ]
been made up to (late. ]
The attendance has been good at all j
the meetiugs.and Rev. E. Myers, pastor ]
of the church, is veyy pleased with the j
progress of the meeting.
Eagles Beat the Wildfires. j
In a spirited game of baseball played I
at No. 2 graded school Thursday after- ]
noon, the Eagles, from the Brown-Xor
eott school, beat the Wildfires, of Xo. 2*
with a score of 3to 4. A fine game I
was played and both sides showed good I
interest, but No. 2\s Wildfires could not ]
measure up to the, pace set by the']
Eagles. |
At tlie Theatres.
Tlie Star today is showing Agnes
Ayres in “Worldly Goods.”
Jack Iloxie in “The Sign of the Cac
tus." and Wanda Wiley in "The Trobuic
Makers." are the features being shown
today and tomorrow at the Pastime.
Fur Trimmed 1
Spring Coats I
j and Dresses I
* . 4*.\
i o
Cleaned
' If your coat or dress with
1 I \ its fur trimming is spotted 8
x and stained dull and soiled, x
( w let us clean it for you. Our 8
MB method of cleaning will o
' 8 make them look wonderful- x
‘■ffl ly new.' 2
MB I
IM, R. Pounds J
Jo Dry Cleaning add Tailoring I
MS I
11 ' ■ J. ~ . Vrru .;i; ~ rtiHW. M'|. -I Y '.ly- 1 '
Hg:.. / ■
I Announces -I
I • The Appoinment of
Hi / • " H
I The Reid Motor Company I
I Corbin and Church Streets, Concord, N. C. I
I as Authorized
I Ford Sales and Service Dealer 1
m W. C. PETTY, President DR. J. P. MATHESON, Vice-Pres |
■ N. K. REID, Sec.-Treas. and Manager B
I It is a satisfaction to inform the public of this new asso- E
|t ciation. Here you will obtain Genuine Ford Value as well a
I as Quick, Capable Ford Service at Honest Cost. I
■ H
i igs - * • * *•
1 Take this opportunity to familiarize yourself with the I
I Ford Line, Cars, Trucks and Tractors, and what it offers I .
■ you. Come in and learn for yourself how easy it has been I
H made for you to purchase Ford products. I
I It will be a pleasure to show you. I
H $ • • i
PHONE 400
1 ULJift"' 1 '!- 1 . "J-. o!.i—■ 1 "S.'jjii!. ■■■ '.gweßi! Jftia j^i»gjLjjiij | !iaagaw | ."*^ | i'
MOM’N POP BY TAYLOR
/ ( BoaeoNiT i'vie asksd mom />■ - ■ -y- ■ ■ OiffC in) TVtg SAfteMSKfr
l M>oiEM-nweft-ro-saw some A tlf < mom vomewbs w«T vihatt ARB wou 1
Friday* April 3, 1925