Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / April 4, 1925, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE SIX . Central Methodist. Sunday school at 0:45 a. m., J. K. Davia superintendent. Morning wor ship at 11 o’clock. Evening worship at 7:30 o’clock, with special musical serv-l ice. Prayer service Wednesday at 7:30. Our choir will have full charge of the evening service, and our friends are most cordially invited to come and enjoy the specially prepared program of music with us. Services being promptly at 7.30. Visitors and strangers are always wel come. Wtn. A. JENKINS, Pastor. McGill Street'Baptist. (J. R. Pentuff. Ph. D., Pastor.) Bible school at 9:30 a. m., L. E. Polk superintendent. Pastor teaches men’s Bible class. Worship at 11 o'clock. Sub ject of sermon, "What 16 the Analogy or Likeness Between the Baptism in the Jordan and the Baptism of the Spirit at pentecost”? Dr. S. F. Conrad, of Char lotte, will preach at 7:30 o'clock. Reviv al services will begin on the 19th of this month. B. Y. P. U. at 6:30. We wel come all. St. James Lutheran. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Chief service at 11 a. m. Sermon and con firmation. Luther League at 6:30 p. m. Vespers at 7:30. This church welcomes you. Epworth Methodist. Sunday school at 9.45 a. m. Wor ship and preaching By pastor at 11 a. tn. and 7:30 p, m. Junior League at 3 p. in. Senior league at 6:30 p. in. There will be a service each evening next week a t 7:30 o'clock. These ; services are preparatory to "Confession Day” which is Easter Sunday. Let us all work to gether for a revival in our Sunday school. J. M. VARNER, Tastor. McKinnon Presbyterian. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Preach ing at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. by Rev. R. S. Arrowood. Come and meet the new pastor. All Saints Episcopal. Service Sunday, April sth, (Palm Sun day) : 10 a .m. church Sunday school and rector’s Bible class. 11 a. m. Holy Communion and 6ermon by the rector. Subject. “A Journey Towards God.” Monday, Tuesday and Thursday is Holy i AVeek services in All Saints Church. 10:30 a. m. Holy Communion. 5 p. m. evening prayer. Wednesday at 7:30 a. m. Holy Communion. At 7.30 p. in. evening prayer and address. Good Fri day services will be held at 10:30 a. m. Penitential office. 12 to 3 p. m, three hour service. All are welcome to i our services. Associate Reformed Presbyterian. j (M. R. Gibson, Pastor) Sabbath sehool at 10 a. m. J. E. Me-1 Clintock, superintendent. Special ser=| vices are being held tonight at 7:30 it* 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. The preaching . is being done by Rev. .T. L. Hood, ofj Troutman. N. C. Y. P. C. U. at 6:30. p. m. Monthly meeting of church offi cers at 3 p. m. Important meeting. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at, 7 :30. Public invited to all services. Trinity Reformed The Sunday school and, men's class meet at 9:45 o’clock. J/ O. Moose is superintendent. This Sunday and Fit ter are the last days in the old church. Let us have a full attendance. Serv ices at ll a.'in. and 7:30 p. m. Ser mons by the pastor. The morning service will be the preparatory service. ‘T Am the Bread of Life.” Mission Band meets at 6:30. Next week. Wednesday and Friday nights at 7:45 o’clock, Rev. J. D. Andrew, of the Faith charge, will preach. To all services the church says Forest Hill Methodist. Sunday .school at''9:4s 4. A. Q. Odell superintendent, Stonewall .T. Sher-. rill assistant superintendent. Spring is here and you need the Sunday school; and the Sunday school needs you. Come Sunday. Morning worship and sermon at 11 oc’tOCk. Epworth' League devo , ■ ,r-, »ew... . I'’'. i-.Vcr ' J. j*' . J ® «* than a , y c ßuicks are i > As Good As They Look By the distinctive appearance of Buick i motor cars, you may judge their inntr j quality. The same engineering thought that developed the Valve-in-Head engine, Sealed Chassis, automatic lobrica hon, Buick mechanical 4-wheel brakes, mad like factors of superior performance, •is also responsible # for the grace and J the symmetry of Buick body lines. r « jbj ■■■ SI -.A n|l |IA 1c |j KjJII,K vUMrANY tional meeting at 6:30. Evening wor ship and sermon at 7:30 o’clock. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at" 7:15. Yon are welcome to worship with us. THOS. F. HIGGINS, Pastor. i Calvary Lutheran. Sunday school at 9:45 a. ra. Chief] service at 11 a. m. Luther League at 6 p. m. Visitors and strangers wel come. St. Andrews Lutheran. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Light Rrigade Immediately after Sunday school. Luther League at 6p. m. A’isitors and strangers welcome. Methodist Protestant. Sunday school at 9:45 a. in., Morning worship at II o’clock. A meeting of the entire congregation is called imme diately after the morning service for some matters of great importance. All members will please plan to attend. The Christian Endeavor societies will have charge of the night service at 7 :30. A very entertaining program will be ren dered. a specially prepared “‘Dixie Day Service.” Smith Signs 11 Bills For Safer Mot or tog. Albany, April 2. —Gov. Smith today signed eleven bills affecting drivers of automobiles. They provide: Parents of children over sixteen may obtain for them, on certificate of necessity, a license to operate an auto mobile. Diving girls anti similar posters are banished from windshield and rear windows. License plates of unbonded taxicabs may be seized. License plates used by bootleggers or other criminals to hide the identity of ears may be seized. It is a misdmeanor to attach to an automobile the insignia of . fraternal, military or automobile organization to which one does not belong. A license plate on the front of a car must be plainly visible. Manufacturers and dealers are .re-* quired to register at the Motor Vehicle Bureau the sale of new cars. Courts must report to the Motor A’ehicle Commissioner within forty-eight hours convictions of driving while in toxicated. I British trade union membership has fallen off 3.000,000 since the close of the war. _ 00000000000000000000000000 Let Your !j|j Next Battery jjj jf I Be An I EXIDE jj \ Use Only the | Best" | THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNB FAMOUS KANSAS EDITOR SAYS THE BLOCS RULE William Allen White Talks on the Fu tility of Party Government. Greensboro, April 3.—The two parties are not the rulers of America, AA’illiam '; Allen AVhite, noted Kansas editor, said here in an address tonight, and whatever the chairmen of the Democratic and Re publican parties may think of any mea sures is "of the least importance.” It is the blocs that govern, he assert ed, the Federation of Labor, the League of AA r omen’s A’oters. farmers’ organiza tions, Anti-Saloon League, bankers and lawyers and other organizations, at lestst 100 of them. They do it by creating public senti ; ment, by their appeals to class, or sec tion of ideas or, in some instances, there , is attempt at sordid self-interest by some organizations. ; Thepinti-Saloon League can and does , walk into the AA’hite House on it sheels and dictate the appointment of federal ' judges and district attorneys, Mr. White . said. Before chairmen of the great or ganizations, committee chairmen in Con gress take their hats in their hands; the . two party chairmen have before the great Power of the Leagues and Association • and Blocs no more power than n child ; pushing a go-cart on the side walk, Air. Allen said. He spoke before the open forum, an < organization of Greensboro people that . brings thinkers here to spread their thoughts. TODAY’S EVENTS Saturday, April 4, 1925 Centenary of the birtli of John AA\ Palmer, the noted Confederate war eor , respondent of the New A'ork Tribune. Montgomery. Ala., today will com memorate the one hundredth anniversary of the visit of Lafayette to that city. Twenty-five years ago today the “big news" of the day was Admiral Dewey’s announcement of his candidacy for the Presidency, t One of the most spirited political campaigns Belgium ha. sexperienced ein ! years closes today, preliminary to the parliamentary elections tomorrow. San Francisco today competes prepa rations for the welcome of the American fleet of 145 vessels and the entertain ment of the more than 40.000 officers and men. Sunday. April sth. Today begins the eleventh annual ob servance of National Negro Health Week. John R. Booth, one of the great lead i ers in Canadian finance and industry, I today enters upon his 100th year. > ’ The question of woman suffrage is J the chief issue in the parliamentary elec- I tions to be held in Belgium today. [ The entire American fleet is scheduled j to arrive at San Francisco today for ( a ten-day visit before departing for Hh | waiian wnters for the Spring maneuvers. Post and Flagg’s Cotton Letter. \ New York, April 3—After showing a firm tone during the early Irading the i mnrket turned easier under the influence | or renewed weakness in grain which i acted helpless. Weekly figures as pre pared by this 1 exchange were distinctly bullish but those from New Orleans were disappointing though showing that 1 cotton is still rapidly going - out of \ sight. If the heavy repections by mills i from shipments are to be replaced ■by actual cotton arid not settled by eouK- I promise there is a fresh demand in ' sight for the' actual as fepections have \ been on a very extensive scale, i Possibly unless demand for cloths and 1 yams improves mills will some | form ofadjuetment but if the insist on i the cotton it is difficult to figure just 1 where the shippers are going to find it | at any price, Advices from the goads i markets are showing an improvement 1 which many are confidence will be seen | in the near future. At the moment the i market seems suffering from paralysis ' of the motor nerves but a dull market , that refuses to go down is rarely safe to i sell short and many believe that there ' isl a good supply of buying orders for the i trpde close under the present level, i -The outlook for the next crop is 1 somewhat more promising, though in 1 some quarters there is mqre or less skepticism as to Borne of the recent ad vipes of rains in Texas on the ground that they possibly rebect the market position of some of the senders rather than the actual figures recorded by the rnin gauge. The correction in the New Orleans figures for the takings late in the day made the amount considerably in excess of the New York lgures. POST AND FLAGG. Average wages in the United States, measured by the food they will buy, are now nenrly five times greater than in Rome, Vienna or Madrid. ACHED” Lady Says Her Back “Hurt Nifkt mA Day”—Least Noise Up »«t Her. Better After Taking Carda. Winfield, Texas.—"My back hart Bigrt rad day” says Mrs. C. L. Eason, of R. F. D. 1, this place. "I ached and ached until I could hard ly go. I felt weak and did not feel like doing anything. My work was a great burden to me. I just hated to. do up 'the dishes, even. I waa no-accotmt and extremely nervous. “My mother bad taken Cardni and she thought it wonld do me good, so she told me to take it. My husband got me a bottle and 1 began on It I began to Improve at once. It waa such a help that I continued It until after the baby** birth. “I took eight bottles and I can certainly say that It helped me. It is a fine tonic. It built m* up rad seemed to strengthen me. X grew less nervous and began to gfocip bot&BTe “I era certainly recommend Cardni to exgpctant mothers, tor to me It wak a wonderful help. ... In ovary way I felt better after taking it and I think it is a splendid medL etna.” Cardni Is purely vegetable, and fWe cordially invite you to see olir Big Spring j line of young men’s Suits in all the newest shades and colors for Easter. '' ■[' Pjj; i $19.95 value mans light color wide leg pants. Spe ll rial for Easter " $14.95 U I Just received big shipment young men’s Kirsch- I baurn Bieber Isaac and Rochester make. These Suits are all guaranteed. Regular $35.00 and $37.50 Suits. Special for Easter $24.95, $27.50 and $29.95 * , -—— — -? —*— ■ Young Men‘s Shirts and Ties What is better than a nice white Broadcloth and $2.00 value QO. \ r Shirt and a Striped Tie? Easter Sale JJOCj «P 1/ |R i | Men’s White English Broad- $1.50 /jijJ ( , cloth Shirts, all sizes * Men’s-Neck Ties for Easter in Silk Clmft Iff Shirts with and without Collars 01 QQ ; (Commodore) guaranteed .... * * Nit and Knit Ties. Also Slim Jim Ties. \ One special lot Men’s Dress Shirts, $1.50 See our big stock for Easter. ‘ '*■ ’" \ ‘I : z “i ■ vs j t Men’s Hats Men’s Caps Get a new'Sure-fit-Cap for Easter. We If you want a new: Easter Hat. See our ' - v . Wales model and all the new shades. Priced have all colors and van match you*. Suit. from £2 9$ to $4 Prices-.- * QO. to <l*o QG from.. I T**”® . - (See Our Stetson Hats For Easter) j » . - ,v *’ .! ]• i ■ < , v jH /• / i ; Buy a pair of Light Tan Oxfords for # ( , Easter. We carry the Ralston Health \ , Slippers for young men in all the new \ shades and lasts. Prices that will ] tickle your feet $7.95 <3^ss4i9B ‘ ( r I tabs - BMK co. : ; I - , •'* . tj Phones 608 and 138 Concord, N. C. ; We Deliver Evering We Sell ■ .. ‘'• iV im '■ j, ii - v - ' v » • .ii. • > t ht . We carry the Coopers Underwear for men. If yo.u are hard to fit come in and see us. We have regulars, slims, stouts and long stouts. Nothing like getting a fit. Regular $1.60 and $1.76 values. QQ« and tt*l OC Easter Price Alsbjhave Hknes at-;’.a Real Low Price, j Saturday, April 4, 1925 Men’s Dress Sox, just the thing for 1 j Easter. All kinds of sport sox. Priced j ,rom 25c ,0 98c | One special lot Young Men’s _ m Sox.Blfc values, per pair “TOC »
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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April 4, 1925, edition 1
6
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