Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / April 14, 1925, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAGE EIGHT I Tests Shaw Seed Com Is Poor .V i Jl*¥ HB9H/ jj/msm HLlyßeißMi^M The Imperative need of testing com before planting to insure a nor mal yldd was vividly demonstrated at the National Seed Com show, held ui Chicago under the auspices of the Sears-Roebuck Agricultural Founda tion. More than 27,000 ears from forty-five states were exhibited and the tests revealed the fact that more than 25 per cent of the ears showed poor germination and these were the best ears which more than 27,000 com growers could find. The winning ear, which captured the SI,OOO prize, which was grown ,by Mrs. Elsa M. Pulaska of Waverly, 111., proved up 100 per cent in germination power and disease resistance. The testa were In charge of Joseph Naylor. The big lesson of the National Seed Cora show to the farmers of America was tersely told by Samuel R. Guard, director of the Fwunda tlon. as follows: “The lesson of the corn show could be fourid on almost any county ™“* e - Take the best dozen ears and the poorest dozen. A dozen ears will plant an acre of ground. At the end of the season the best dozen seed ears will yield 70 bushels on the acre, or maybe 80 or 90. The poor est dozen will yield 35 bushels. Same land, same work, same weather, same overhead, same cost. And yet the 12 good seed earn yield twice as much crop as the 12 poor ears. That Is the big lesson of the show." 3 At i FISHER’S 1 B AFTER EASTER I SALE All Spring Coats and' "I Ensemble Suits :j 15 to 33 1-3 Per Cent I OFF Visit FISHER'S It Pays aooe<»oo{»ooooooooooooo<x»oot»ocMacMvxy»pix»ffiOQOflfflK»000 | SECURE COMFORT | By Using :j: SINCLAIR FORD OIL I Gives The Transmission Iji THAT VELVET ACTION | Mutual Oil Company I \ Phone 476 R or 880 ooooooooooooooooooeooooooooooooooooooooooeoooooeooooo sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooodooooooor IDELCO LIGHT j \ Light Plants and Batteries Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter- ! nating current and Washing Machines for direct or alter- ' > nating current. ! , R.H. OWEN, Agent Phone IN Concord. N. C. goooocooobdbooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooboooooo 8 S/\ /) fi i M _ _ I IajAJJLQj 3 / V , ■ ! ■IJLJ-'I I X 2 FANCY DRY GOODS WOMEN'S WEAR I * _ r . " „ . THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE The Concord Daily Tribune TIME OF CLOSING OF RAILS. J The time, of the closing of mafia at the Concord postoffiee is as follows: Train No. Traih No. 44—11 *» p. m. Train No. 86 —10:00 a. m. 1 Train No. 88—9 p. m. I Train No. 80—11:00 p. m. i Train No. m. Train No. 45—3 :45 p. m. Train No. 185— 9:00 p. m. I Train No. 20—11:0O p. m. | )l LOCAL MENTION j ! The weekly meeting of the Concord Rotary Club will be held at the Y. M. ,C. A. tomorrow at 12:30 p. m. P. M. I.afferty continues to show im provement following an operation for the removal of his tonsils several days ago. Mias Carrie Garmon is confined to her] home on East Depot street on account of illness. The condition of Wallace Moore, who! was taken to the Concord Hospital Mon-| day. is much improved. Marriage license was issued Monday by ] Register of Deeds Elliott to .Tames L. I Alexander, of Charlottes, ami Miss Lein i Howell, of this city. Improvement is reported today in the condition of Mrs. L. D. Coltraue, .Tr., wiio underwent treatment for some time in a Charlotte hospital. She returned to her home here last Friday. Improvement is reported today in the condition of Mrs. TV. H. Wadsworth who i has been ill at her home on North Church street for several days following an at tack of appendicitis. The condition of Mrs. W. H. Wads worth; who has been confined to her home on Church street as a result of, an attack of appendicitis Saturday, is very much improved. TVs have received from Lewis Orieco, of this county, an invitation to the com mencement exercises of Boiling Springs High School April 19-22. Prof. T. W. Andrews, of High Point, will deliver the literary address on the 22nd. R. C. Litaker and Dr. Robert Fisher left this afternoon for Wilmington to at tend the State Head ('amp meeting of the Woodmen of the World. They are j delegated from local camp No. 10 and expect to return home Friday, , The trustees of Saiith Chapel, a Meth odist Church in No. 4 township, have sold for the Church a tract of laud in No. 4 , township to C. D. Alexander for SIOO, ac cording to a deed filed at the court house Monday. 1 Local busses will be discontinued be tween Concord and Kannapolis beginning Wednesday, it was announced today. The reason for this action is that the Greens boro-Chariotte busses which arc to run every half hour will pick up the Con cord-Kannapolis passengers. A mail collection box has been placed at the intersection of Tribune and Union streets for the convenience of the per sons living in that section Os the city. Several of the collection boxes have been placed at various points in the city in recent weeks. The regular meeting of the Cabarrus Black Roys chapter D. A. R. will meet at the home of Mrs. ('has. A. Cannon, North Union street, Wednesday after noon at 3:30, Mrs. W. M. Sherrill and Mrs. R. K. Black were hostesses with Mrs. Cannon. Elm Camp Woodmen of the World will hold an old-time spelling match to night at their regular meeting. Web-' ster’s blue back speller will be used to give the old-timers a chance to show what they know about English. All mem bers are urged to he present to get in on the match. Regular work was resumed in the pub lic schools of the city this morning fol lowing a one day recess for Easter. The schools of the city closed Friday after noon. Easter Monday being given as the holiday. The holiday Monday was the last scheduled one during the present term of school. Some of the public schools of the coun ty will close their work this week, ac cording to reports reaching Concord, while others will wind up their affairs next ] week. County Commencement will be! held this year on the twenty-fifth of this month and many of the schools will have completed their work by that date. Burks Withers and Amos Davis, of Norfolk, Va., and Winnsboro, S. C.. re spectively, returned Monday to their homes after being called here by the ill ness and death of their mother-in-law. Mrs. M. L. Brown. Mrs. Withers and Mrs. Davis will remain in Concord sev* eral days longer. The Baptists took another step toward the State baseball title Monday when they defeated the State players 5 to 4 in 12 innings. At the same titme the Carolina team was winning. rather easily from Davidson s>y an Bto 3 score. The Wake Forest team now has defeated State, Guilford and Trinity. Police officers of the city again.today reported little activity. No session of the city court was held Monday afternoon and Chief. Talbirt this morning stated that members of his department had little to i do Monday and Monday night. “Easter was quietly observed here so far aB we have been able to learn,’’ Chief Taibirt stated. “Play ball,” will sound in the major leagues this afternoon as the sixteen teams line up for the 1925 season. Man agers of all the teams expect a better brand this year than’ was offered last year and the race for the pennant in the two leagues is expected to be close throughout the season. Many radio fans here plan to get the scores of the i opening games early this evening. —.. ;s-. After keeping it for eighty years. Miss, Susannah Barlow, of Windsor, England, was buried in a nightgown which was made for her troussean. She was, how- 1 ever, disappointed in love, and the gar ment was never worn. ■ It is quite a usual-thing to see Fili pino mothers puffing away at cigarettes, Or even cigara, while they nurse their babies. '.:.r;rx . . /iK!\TOA\ (R 3) SIMS WSAYS No real sportsman will shoot more than two spring poets in one day. . Telling a girl her petticoat is showing is a mistake, because they don't wear ; them. £/• ■ Be getting your Christmas gifts in! shape to give ns-wedding presents. | What this country needs most is less ■things it needs most, i It will be impossible for spring to ! wear out her welcome. I It w true that money talks, but a I man telis ns his weekly pay cheek can 'barely speak above a Whisper. Now comes the season of the year when coal dealers are busy tring to get theic friends back. The wyather is dismissed more often than. any other subject simply because I it is thb closest. | Wouldn’t the farmers be a happy I bunch if they could find an insect which | eats nothing but weeds? I Women are not men's equals. We ; know. We tried to slap one on the 1 back and borrow a dollar from her. j The,Wall Street sucker's motto seems to be "if at first you don't fail, trjt, try, j again.’’ The moon looks so romantic; if there 1 are people on it we ddn't know wheti they have time to work. (Copyright, 1025, NEA Service, Inc.) FOB SALE AT AUCTION One C Creaters Peanut and popcorn machine. Roasts well and looks good. | Horse drawn. Weight about 1200 Lbs. At Kannapolis postoffiee next Satur day at 2:00 p. m. R. B. CANDY CO., 13-st-c. Kannapolis, N. C. WANTS EVERY ONE TO KNOW ABOUT II Suffered From Stomach Trouble and In digestion. HERB JUICE Gave Relief After She Had Lost Fifteen Pounds. “I am most pleased that it was my good fortune to learn of HERB JUICE in time to save 'me from further suffering. I never knew what it was to have a well day on account of constant twins which 1 suffered a»‘a result of stomach trouble and Such would be my con dition today if it were not for HERB JUICE." stuff Mrs. Lucy Nichols, of 4<X! East Sixth St., Charlotte N. C., in n recent interview with the IIERB JUICE demonstrator. HySSv; MRS. LUCY NICHOLS “In my opinion, UERB JUICE is the greatest medicine on the market today, and I am most eager for all to know what a truly wonderful cure it is for stomach trouble, constipation and indigestion. I could not eat anything; in fact, not enough to give me strength to stay up and do my work. Everything I ate dis agreed with me and gas would form on my stomach, which made me feel as if I was suffocating. My liver was sluggish and I felt tired and worn out all the tune. I could nots. sleep well at nights and would awake every morning with a ter rific headache. My whole system was out of order, for I needed a thorough clean ! ser and regulator. In HERB JUICE I found what I was looking for. I have gained eight pounds since takihg the herbal remedy’’ The einert of the HERB JUICE Lab oratories, had established headquarters in Concord at Gibson Drug Co., and will gladly tell you without any cost just what benefit you can obtain from HERB JUICE. Abb sold in Kaanapoib by F. L. Smith Drug Co. '-V 11 ■" Your Money Goes Farther On RACINE TIRES ! Jarratt’s Service East Corbin St. Phone 802 Green Front REAL FEEDS If you want more Milk and Better Mifk, feed Spartan Dairy Feeds. j. j If you Want more eggs feed Spartan Laying Mash. ■ If you want the best in any kind of feud, see us. Cabarms Cash Gro- The program for the spring meeting I of the Maryland Jockey Club, to be open ed at Pimlico on May 1. calls for a' stake event every day of the meeting, with the Dixie Handicap as the feature of the opening day. The total added money for the eleven days of the meeting . will be $223.20®. ■ During the football* season the Oov- I eminent benefits tt> the extent of about 'sloo,ooo a week from the taxes paid on games. i MEETING OF CABARRUS MI TTAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY The regular meeting of the Cabarrus I Mutual Fire Insurance Company will be held at 1:30 p. in. Monday, April 29th, in the offices of the company in this city. - JOHN K. PATTERSON, Sec’y. 14-2 t-e. CONCORD COTTON MARKET TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1*25 Cotton *23 3-4 Cotton Semi .52 1-2 CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected weekly by Cline tc Moose) Figures named represent prices paid tor produce on the market t Eggs *3O Cora 1 *l-35 Sweet potatoes 1.50 Turkeys —i-i *25 to .30 Onions SIM Peas $3.00 Butter -30 Country Ham .21 Country Shoulder .10 Country Side* .10 Young Chickens .25 Hens *- -20 Irish Potatoes .08 Chicken Feed Horse and Mule Feed Dairy Feed Oats, Ship Stuff, Bran, Timothy Hay, Clover Hay, Meadow Hay, Shucks, and Straw. We have large ware rooms just filled with the very best feeds. Our feeds are all put up in Plain Bags— No trash or grit and are sold on their merits, instead of fancy bags. The price is cheaper. Cline & Moose NOTICE! The regular annual meeting of the stockholders of The Cabarrus County Building Loan and Savings Association will, be held in its office in The Concord National Bank on Thursday, April 16tb, 1925, at 5 9’clock P. M. L. D. COLTRANE, President. J. M. HENDRIX, Secretary. 9-Bt>c. We have the follow ing used cars for sale or exchange: 1 Ford Touring 1 Ford Roadster 1 Star Roadster 1 Buick Roadster ; 1 Overland Touring 1 Piedmont Touring We will be glad to show you these cars any time. STANDARK BUICK COMPANY Opposite City Fire Dept J. V. DAVIS DENTIST Office Removed to Fourth Floor Cabarrus Savings Bank Building Phone 483 Hoots: 8 to B Add the Comforts of PLUMBING to Your Home Modern Plumbing will do as ■ much or more than any other one thing toward making your home a comfortable and convenient place in which to live. It costs you nothing to get our cost es timate. Concord Plumbing Company North Kerr Street Phone m I 'Xv f!W." • • ' . : - f ! I sons—one weighs 130—one j j X J [ 140 and one 155 and I’ll just \ I . 1 |!| take *it home with me and \ | The values in our windows are making men rub their eyes. ]i| | | The same Values inside are making our bookkeeper rub out X i i his last year’s records. ![!, SCHLOSS SPRING SUITS $25.00 to $45.00 HOOVER’S, Inc. f “THE YOUNG MAN’S STORE” QQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOOQQOOOOOOOOOQCOOGOOOOOOOO S AUTO (LEANING MAKE YOURS A SPOTLESS CMt| A do •' easy-running car by employing us to<!» ,*|r lubricate it for you. Our auto ser-jlj ji vice adds to your pleasure as a cari'i J °' vnor > also <■» life. STATION I and Lubricating w, “ ■“■ j —— fc.wwivniiiw PHONE 88* OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO COAL PRICES REDUCED I j ] ; Best Virginia Lump, per ton $7.50 ]i[ Best Jellico Block, per ton $8.50 | I Pocahontas Furnace EGG and Lump, per ton $9.00 j! Coal is cheaper now than it will be in July. Order in ji| ton Lots and SAVE. A. B. POUNDS PHONE 244—279—517 ul If " Statement of . CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK Close of business April 6, 1925 Condensed from report to North Carolina Corporation Commission RESOURCES j Loans and Discounts $2,202,868.19 Stocks and Bonds 35,031.83 Banking House, Furniture and Fixtures 245,626.63 Other Real Estate 2,500.00 Cash in vaults and due from banks 655,677.37 I ■'■*' Total $3,141,704.02 LIABILITIES Capital Stock $ 400,000.00 Surplus, Profits, Reserve, etc. 109,005.27 Deposits 2,632,698.75 Bills payable * NONE Rediscounts NONE Total 53,141,704.02 LET US SERVE YOU FOLKS THAT BURN I ( ’** , „ 8 I' A _ I w Ml guaranteed, g AT I <£)elii?erpj ij: Kith \ ; We. Sell, say “Ha! Ha! to the I ! ! | | Prove what we say is true —try it. & I i CRAVEN’S cS, j! PLASTER oooooooooooooooooooooooooooopuooooooooooooooooooooooC' 1 I, all insurance business formerly handled t Company was transferred to the Fetzer ink Building, Mezzanine Floor. Phone 931 e Insurance Agency A. JONES YORKE ITHEPINKY COLUMN GETS IN EVERY THE Tuesday, April 14, 1925
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 14, 1925, edition 1
8
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