Tuesday, April 14, 1025
THE OLD HOME TOWN BY STANLEY
{(THE WOMEN FOLKS HEIPJNS IDA HOoPEfe ~)
I HOUSE CLEAN FAILED To NOTICE A STRW [•>' . ■■■
l a°?„S^ SE P EIf BRENNERS CALF -TMROLXJH WM&' / -''-~ * w “*>'
VIA curtain stretchep. -s«►,
- 1J.." Liiia -..Agel-i —'L.. Iji I 'ii mi ii I ——
30000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
SEE THE KELVINET I!
The Electric Refrigerator Complete ::
At Cline’s Pharmacy
BEGINNING SATURDAY, APRIL 11th
j![ The Kelvinet is ample in size for the family of four or •] |
five. It freezes dainty cubes of ice for the table. Colder ' '
!j! than ice-cooled refrigerator and keeps foods much longer. ! !
]!| It Operates at About One-Third the Cost of Ice J |
ij: J. Y. PHARR & BRO.
Phone 103, 127 or 208
| > "
i Texaco Gasoline and Oils
Let us grease your car? We use Alemite Lubricants
j exclusively, and proper lubrication is the life of any car.
Car Washing, Tire hanging, Crank Case Service, Accessor
ies
CENTRAL FILLING STATION
PHONE 700
! OOOOCXXXXX)QOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQQOQ<!^QQQOOOoqqqqqqq
jj CASH FEED STORE ’ J
[i Will insure the life of your baby chicks when you use Star- ] |
|i * ina a! Chix how for your chicks. And if you feed ]!|
11 according to directions you can grow a two pound chick <!'
!; in eight weeks. All we ask is a Fair Trial. ||
|| p also have Choice Timothy Hay, Oats and Sweet j!|
I Phone 122 S. Church St. jjj
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCXXXiOOOOOOOOOQOOOoooOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOO
I QUALITY! . SERVICE! I
It is our desire to give pur customers the Best of Goods '
; and the Best of Service at Moderate Prices.
i If you are not one of our customers, we would appre- |!|
! ciate you giving us a trial. We try to merit your patronage. ' ; ;
Sanitary Grocery Co.
“A REAL GOOD PLACE TO TRADE”
XSCOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOO\IOOOO
! m
1 —' —- —*—
1 In and About the City
Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle.
s|gg§|^g||j|||g
History of the Kannapolis Presbyterian
Church.
The Presbyterian Church was organ
ized in 1!KH) with fourteen charter mem
j hors. Tlie first officers were A. J. Wine
■ coff, elder, and J. M. Goodnight, M. J.
' Areher, J. P. Whitley, deacons. Rev.
I'. H. Query was instrumental in or
ganizing the church and supplied the
church until Rev. T. B. Anderson was
called as pastor. It was under his
leadership that the first church building
’ was erected at a cost of $2,700 plus the
1 lot which was donated by Mr. and Mrs.
.T. W. Cannon. Incidentally this was
. the first church building of any denomi
: nation erected in Kannapolis.
| Following Mr. Anderson, the church
| has been served by the following pastors:
■Rev. J. W. Shipley, Rev. C. C. Myers,
| Rev. Neil Melnnis and Rev. W. C. Jaini
i son.
i ,0n March Bth the congregation wor
| shipped for the first time in the audi
i tcrium of the handsome new church
l building. They had been worshipping
j in the basement of the building since
i September 22nd, having moved from the
i old building before the new one was com
| pleted in order to give the school the use
I of the old building until the new high
• school building could be completed. The
i new building is admirably adapted for
i the work of the church. It is handsome
l[ and commodious. There are fifteen large
I I class rooms, besides pastor’s study, choir
i 1 room, kitchen, rest room and pastor’s
1 1 assistant study. There are two nudi
j i torinms of equal size which are comfort
|i able and well lighted. The building is
11 healed wph the best type of heating unit.
i It is of colonial design and the interior
i furnishings conform to this type as near
| ly as possible.
i The church officers are ns follows:
| Elders. H. H. Goodnight, C. C. Hill,
1 J. S. Query, clerk'; George W. I>e. G.
i B. Brandon, Dr. G. C. Bernard, H. D.
! McCorkle, C. M. Powell, J. M. Goodnight,
i M. Q. Johnston.
i Deacons: J. C. Taylor. E. E. Lady,
• J. G. Lowe. R. H. Holdbrooks, N. H.
, Coggins, W. li. Walker, L. M. McCorkle,
i R. T. Fry. F. IT. Rogers, H. A. Allred,
j H. B. Rogers. Clias. Goodnight, H. P.
i Townsend, Dr. J. H. Parks, and Robert
i Efird. J
| Mrs. R. Frank Flowe is president of
i the Woman’s Auxiliary,
i Mr., H. A. Allred is superintendent of
| Sunday school, \vrth Mr. H. D, McCorkle
i assistant superintendent and, G. B.
BrandiM, gonerair secretary of * Sunday
| school. The enrollment of the Sunday
school is at present 21)3 with an average
i attendance of over 200.
| The membership of the chureh is ap
l proximately 325.
| Textile Situation and Outlook.
i Charlotte Observer.
| The Textile World makes report that
, new business is not being placed in large
i quantities on any class of cotton goods.
| Many mills, it says, have a satisfactory
i volume of orders for the next few months,
i however, though the situation continued
| rather spotty. Ginghams and percales
i of well known mills continue to lag be
i hind scheduled deliveries, indicating the
; extent of the improvement that has been
made by these fabrics.
The primary influence on the goods
market from now on until the end of
the Summer will be the development of
the new cotton crop. It is fairly well
established that a slightly larger aerenge
will be planted this year than last, but
even another crop as large os that of
1024 should not cause cotiton prices to
go much below present quotations.
Considerable interest has been display
ed in the speech made by President Cool
idge last Slonday at a dinner of the Na
tional Association of Cotton Manufac
turers in Washington. The President’s
failure to refer specifically to the ad
vance in duties advocated by some manu
facturers on fine count unfinished goods
has been generally interpreted as mean
ing that he does not favor action at this
time. '
Bergen Newton Injured In Accident. |
, i Bergen Newton, of this city, is in the j
Concord Hospital with a fractured skull
as the result of an auto accident early |
this morning at the intersection of Kerr :
Street and Franklin Avenue, his condi
tion being reported as serious during the
day. <■
According to reports to police officers
Newton was injured when Ills Ford car,
and a Chevrolet by J. C. Canup met at j
the street intersection and Newton’s car (
turned partially around and then hurled
itself across the street. Canup was not
injured, and his ear was not badly dam
aged.
Newton was rushed to ithe hospital im
mediately after the accident and his in
jury was diagnosed as a fracture of the
skull.
Pastor Called.
Last Sunday the MJest Concord Bap- j 1
tist Church extended a call to Rev. W.
P. McCarter, of Gastonia, and he has 1
accepted the call, and will preach there
Wedenesday night. He will also admin-;,
Ister the ordinance of Baptism. The pub- (
lie is is invited to this service.
Mr. McCarter will move to Concord 1
about the first of next week. I 1
Miners in the Tahoe National Forest 1
working a gold mine, 3,000 feet below '
the lava cap of the Sierra peaks, came
across an old flood deposit in which
were the tangled logs of a group of i
sequoias in a perfect state of preserva
tion.
No femnles, either animal or human,
■are allowed on the Athos peninsula in :
Eastern Macedonia, Greece, io wnich
the patriarch of Constantinople, head of
the Greek church, has retired. Eggs and
milk for the monks to eat and drink
must come from across the sorder of 1
this monastic republic.
THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
j j —.—3 .•■— .
; --PP
You may never have heard of 6-hori
zontal, bu; you’ll have little effort to get
' it. Only one letter is tinkered, and any
1 dictionary ought to help you, after you
> have the first three letters.
HORIZONTAL
1 Pieces of furniture upon which we
place our food.
0 Blisters.
| 11 Edge of roof.
• 12 Assists.
- '3 Second note of scale.
15 Formed a scheme.
17 Part of verb to be.
' 18 Tablet.
1 20 Withered.
? 21 To drink slowly.
22 Cow-headed goddess.
| 24 Scarlet.
‘ 25 To plow.
J 26 Distributes cards.
' L’S To obliterate.
2!1 To cry as a cat.
30 To join by sewing.
' 31 Black haws.
• 34 Loyal. •
7 37 To intimate.
38 Very high mountain.
40 Emperor.
41 Wand.
’ 42 To embrace.
• 44 Before.
■ 45 Within. ...'/
- 46 Mottled.
48 Printer’s measure. :.
• 40 Meager. ~
■ 50 A list.
£
l^ n NEWS
(By the Associated Press)
Program For April 15tli.
WSB, Atlanta Journal, (428.3) 10:45
entertainment.
WEEI, Boston (476) 6:15 choir; 7 or
chestra; 7:30 musical; 8 opera; 9 Sin
ionians.
WGR, Buffalo, 3101 fipiusie; 7-9:30
musical; 9:30-10 Southern' auto tour; 10-
12 dance.
KYW, Chicago 530) 7 concerdt; 7:45
entertaining plans; 8 musical; 8:30 stage
review; 8:45 music! 9:45-1 revue.
WGN, Chicago Tribune (370.9) 6 or
gan ; 6 :30 concert, ensemble, 8 classical;
10 dance; jazz artists.
WLB, Chicago (344.6) 6:3rt organ,
specialities; 7 :15 lone scoute 8 R. F. D.,
program; 0 orchestra, .readings, duets,
harmony tour.
WEBH Chicago Post (370.2) 7 con
cert; 0 talk, tenor ;/*0 brass quartet, Ha
waiian guitars, songs, violin.
WEAR, Cleveland (389.4 ) 6 concert.
WTAM, Cleveland (380.4) 7 WEAF
program; 10 dance.
WLW, Cincinnati (422.3) 6 concert,
10 trio, monologue. Hello boys, dance.
WFAA, Dallas (silent).
WOC, Davenport (484) 6:30 Sand
man ; 6:50 oral hygiene; 9 musical, or
gan, baritone.
KOA, Denver (322.4) 9:10 quartet, vo
cal, pianist, harp, instrumental; 12
dance.
WHO, Des Moines (520) 6:30 orches-
I tra; 7:30 soprano, piano duets; 9 sym
i phonic; 9:45 orchestra.
WWJ, Detroit News (852.7) 7 News '
oroebestra; 8 concert : 9 dnhee.
WBAP, Fort Worth Star-Telegram ,
(475.9) 7:30 program: 9:30 dance,
j PWX, Havana (400) 7:30 band con- ■
cert.
! KNX. Hollywood (33T) 8:15 music; <
9 concert; 10 varied ; 12 orchestra. f
WOS Jefferson City (440.9) 8 address
dress, string band. 1
Snakes In Ireland.
There are no snakes in Ireland. The
lizard is the only reptile native in the
[country. The legend that St. Patrick
expelled the snakes from Ireland is very
old. The “Apostle of Ireland” lived in
the fourth and fifth century. Tradi
| tions do not agree on the methods used
by St. Patrick in his miracle of re
-1 moving the snakes. One old writer says
he accomplished the feat by beating a
| drum. He struck the drum so hard
11hat he knocked a hole in it, thereby en
dangering the success of the miracle.
But an angel arrived from heaven at
the crucial moment and mended the drum.
In the Gaelic mountains there is a place
called Lou&h Dilveen. It is said that
while banishing the snakea St. Patrick
chained a monster serpent at Dough
Dilveen nnd told him to remain there
until Monday. Even to this day the
peasants in the vicinity say the old ser
pent calls out every Monday morning:
“It is a long Monday. St. Patrick.”
Another story says that' one serprtit
caused St. Patrick considerable trouble.
Tlje saint then resorted to cunning. He
made a box and invited the snake to en-
52' Flexible. " “ 1 ■ 11
53 Insane person. ■
VERTICAL
1 Inert.
2 To subsist.
3 Boy.
4 Nights.
5 To part.
6 Placed upon foundation.
7 Spoke falsely.
8 To total.
0 Part of verb to be.
10 Specimen.
14 To relieve.
1(1 Angers.
17 Is eick.
10 Precious stone (used in engagement
rings).
21 People of Siam.
23 Fine driving icy particles.
25 Charaacteristic.
27 Call for help at sea.
28 Snake-like fish.
31 Small marine animal (good in sal
ads).
32 Animal, called king of the beasts.
33 To babble.
35 Sharp, covetous.
36 Pertaining to sandy regions.;
38 Vigilant.
39 Hymn.
42 Shoot of a plant.
43 Pretense.
46 Meadow grass.
47 Lion’s home.
49 3.1416.
51 Seventh note in scale.
WDAF, Kansas City Star (365.6)
6 School of the Air; 8 classical; 11:45
Nighthawks.
KHJ, Los Angeles Times (460) 8 con
cert ; 8 :30 children ; 100 lecture; 10:30
lecture; 10:30 community program, 11:30 ■
instrumental; 12 orchestra.
WHAS, Louisville Journal (399.8) i
concert. (
WWCO, Minneapolis-St. Paul (416.8) ]
6 song contest; 8 farm talk; 10:30 dance, <
soprano, quartet: 11:30 organ.
WHAD, Milwaukee (275 ) 8 dance. ]
WMC, Memphis (silent). i
WEAF, New York (491.5) 6 trio; 6:30 ]
band concert; 7:30 harpist, pianist; 8 i
Ipana hour; 9 symphony; 10 orchestra. <
WJZ, New York (454.3) orchestra; j
7 Wall St. Journal review; 7:10 NYU i
Air college; 7:30 glee club, 9:30 dance. ]
WHN, New York (361.2) 6:30 health ]
talk; 8 orchestra; 9 dance; 10:30 re- i
vue; 11 dance.
WOR, Newark (405)~7 soprano; 7:45 ]
vocal; 9:30 saxophone ensemble; 10:15 1
torches tra.
KGO, Oakland (361.) 6 concert. 1
KDKA, Pittsburgh (309.1) 6:45 talk;
7:15 address; 8 Ory Slitz hour.
WCAE, Pittsburgh (461.3) 6:30 Sun
shhine girl; 7:30 concert; 9:30 con
cert.
KGW, Portland Oregonian (491.5) 8 i
concert, solos; 10 concert.
WKAQ, Porto Rico (340.7) 6 musical. 1
WFI, Philadelphia (394.5) 6 talk. i
WOO, Philadelphia (508.2) 6:30 or- J
chestra ; 7 concert; 9:03 recital; 9:30
orchestra. ,
KPO, San Francisco (429.5) 8:30 or- 1
chestra; 9:30 band; 10 instrumental; 11 I
old songs; 12 dance.
WGY, Schenectady (370.5> 6 orches
tra, organist.
KJR. Seattle Post Intteligencer (234.4)
10:3Q concert; 11:30 travelogue. i !
WBZ, Springfield (333.3) 6:30 French 1
course; 7 Uncle Bill; 7:15 music clubs; !
8:45 dance; 9.05 singing orchestra. ’ i
KSD, St. Louis Post Dispatch (545.1 1 ) !
7 program.
ter . it. ; The serpent objected on the
ground that the box was too small. St.
Patrick said it was large enough to be
comfortable. So the argument continued 1
until the snake finally got into the box \
to prove that it was too small. St. 1
Patrick slammed down the lid and threw ]
the box into the sea. The legend fur- !
ther says that the waves of this snake i
and that the noise of the surf is that
of the serpent imploring for release.
Tradition says St. Patrick banished the
toads as well as the snakes.
Two fighting-planes collided a mile in
the air at Kelly field, San Antonio,
Texas, recently. The pilots leaped, fell
swiftly for hundreds of feet, opened
their parachutes and floated down side
by side to safety, while the two ships
hit the earth with thunderng crashes
and burst into flames.
Pedestrnins have the right-of-way !
over motorists outside the central traf
fic zone in Los Angeles. One afoot de
siring to cross a street at any intersec
tion not under polic control signals 'his
desire by holding up his hand to ap
-1 proacbing motorists. J
' l /nc orporaud
571 DEPARTMENT STORES-.
% •' 50-54 South Union Street )\
Men’s Athletic Underwear
Splendid Qualities and Values
With Spring just ahead it’s time to think about
light weight underwear- As usual, we’re ready
t early with the right assort
ments and the right values.
Men’s Athletic Union Suits j
Os good quality nainsook; well made
and finished. Low priced at—
Men’s Athletic Union Suits
Os very fine quality nainsook; full
cut; well made; low priced—
»-
j BOYS’ CLOTHING |
A Splendid Showing of Boys’ four- |
I piece Suits. New patterns and qual-
I \ j
ity that will give real Service.
i If
| RICHMOND-FLOWE CO. j
90000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
I ; Follow the Fashions
|j! With New Footwear
It doesn’t require Keen Style Sense to appreciate that our Shoe ! |
J! i styles for Spring are different from what has been shown before. You i
i J will follow real Fashion Ideas when you choose your footwear at 1
iji this store. Matchless values from
$2.95 to $7.50
PARKER’S SHOE STORE
;j ; n n n PHONE 857 nnnnnrinrnnrn . whejreyou save ! ;
I YOUR HAT :
Can Make a World of Difference in :
Your Appearance
Keep it Clean and Well Shaped
We Clean and Block Hats
, One Day Service on Felts
Bob’s Dry Cleaning Co.
I
PAGE THREE