Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / May 2, 1925, edition 1 / Page 5
Part of The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Saturday, May % 1925 W^M/Mnlp%^MA\^ujUpDLM>\pSMHyyi Cape Makes an % Ensemble >" -M $ Vft * * ' V * ’ ■*• I Ma 4 j uB ■ *§&?!' : JBgMmagW H M : |j -J v J ('lt| < :'^^^^H i rMS smart (rock of blue crepe de chine has Its matching cape, to conform to the ensemble Idea she trlmtnlhg l on both dress and jape la of figured foulard in rose jhades. ' ■ Missionary Groups Meet. The groups of the Woman’s Missionary Society of St. James Lutheran Church will meet on Monday, as follows: Groups A.’' B. C. D. at 4:30 p. m., end group E. at 8 p. ir.: . Group A with ‘Sirs. M. O. Harris. Group B with Mrs. W. C. Correll. Group C with Mrs. L. A. Weddington. Group D. with Mrs. W. F. Bingham. v*P Kings Daughters- M&ting. ~~4awre WW-be a meeting sftfie Kings Daughters Monday evening at"’ 7:30 o’clock with Miss Mary King on West Corbin street. Circles of Central Methodist Chureh. The Central Circle, the Migiam Col trane Circle nnd the Lelia Tuttle Circle will meet Monday afternoon at 3.30. with , Mrs. Ernest Hicks on East Depot street. Echoes of the Missionary Conference held in Charlotte will be given by Mrs. Ben Craven. The Laura Harris Circle will meet Monday night at 7:30 with Miss Ruth Crowell cn Franklin Avenue. Baby's colds \ can often be “nipped in the bod" without dbsing by rubbing Vicks over the throat and cheat and also applying a little up the little one’s nostrils. VSSi£ ■ < vy?*- • ••• »• ,* • ■' * v- -v I' p '■> . Hf /no gasped |S Uoldßjt + 1 BELL-HARRrt FUN- Im kral parlor n nn \ UH Nigh* Phone. 360-J6OL ■ lIIpHHMHHHfI PRfmBnNMBHHBHP PERSONAL& r, Mr. and Mrs. Martin I/. Cannon, of ' Charlotte, are spending several days ia Neat Tsrk. . V • P * Rev. and Mrs. J. W. Strider, of Elm wood, spent Friday here. . With their [daughter, Miss Annie Strider, they are impending the week-end at Uniouville. *• * . James A. Hartness, eierk of the super ior court Os Iredell county, was in Con cord Fpday. . • • Mrs. John K. Patterson left this morning tor Rocky Mount to visit her daughter, Mrs. Geo. R. Edwards. ‘ Rev. T. W. Smith has returned to At lanta after spending two weeks with friends in’ Concord. .. > • * Misses Annis Smoot and Robert Pratt and Messrs. Ben White and Martin Foil left this morning in a car for Goldsboro to spend the week-end. • m m \-. Mrs. C. L. T. Fisher, of Mt. Pleasant! is spending the day with Mrs.. R. A. Brown. • • > Miss Vergie Cook wiH leave Sunday -for the Richard Baker Hospital at Hick ory, where she will substitute as head nurse, for several Weeks. ’ • *' • Mrs. John C. Lowe, of Lexington, is the guest of Mrs. Frank Armfield, on West Oorhin street. • • * M. H. Caldwell, Jr., leaves- Sunday for Atlanta, where he has accepted a po sition with the Dixie Metal and 'Calvert Company. Mr. Caldwell has, for the past several months, been coptaected with the Hoover Hosiery Mills of'thirf city. « • • Mrs. Steven A. Wrand, of Wichita, Kansas, is visiting at the home of Mrs. L, A. Fisher. • • v -Airs. Hall Taylor spent Friday in Charlotte with her daughter, Edna, who is undergoing treatment at the Sana torium. Miss Taylor is expected to re turn to her home Sunday. -v •. « • .’’Mrs. Alfred Carriker, matron at the 'Jackson Training School, is undergoing at the Concord Hospital. • • * The condition of Mrs. Lee Watson, who is ill at the Concord Hospital,' is reporte das being improved. » • • \ Mies Lucile Gregory, of Statqsvife, is spending the week-end with Miss Alma Goode at the home of her sister, Mrs. C.. W. Jenkins, on Franklin Avenue. DAUGHTERS OF CONFEDERACY IN SESSION HERE TODAY Mrs. L D. Coltrane Makes Address of Welcome.—State President Makes a Speech. The District meeting of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, which is in session in Concord today as the guest ;of the Dodson Ramseur Chapter; conven ed this morning at the Methodist Sunday School auditorium at 10 ;30 o’clock, Mrs. J. P. Lohr. of Lexington, district cliair mana, presiding. After an invocation by Rev. W. A. Jen kins. pastor of Central Methodist Church, the address of welcome was delivered by Mrs. L. D. Opltrane, of Concord, local chapter head, who made fitting remarks in welcoming the guests to this city. The response was made by Mrs. R. G. Kiser, of Salisbury. Following this, Mrs. Dolph Long, of Graham. State President, made the prin cipal address of the morning. At the conclusion of this speech, a delightful dinner was served those attending the meeting. Over seventy-five women from this district were in attendance. Owing to the fact that The Tribune goes to iwess at an early hour, it was im possible to give a full account of the meeting in today’s paper. Acom plete report of the meeting, however, will •be given in Monday’s paper. Will He Take “Ma” Ahmg? Charlotte, N. €., May 2.—Billy Sunday famous evangelist, wilt do in Charlotte May 11 something he never before has done. The man who has spurred many thousands to hit the sawdust trail says so himself. He will see the Memorial Day race, in which nineteen of the world’-s most famous drivers of automo biles will struggle lor shares of the $25- ,000 in cash prizes staked by the Speed p ; wa.v Association. Mr. Sunday is now conducting a re ;Vival campaign at Winston-Salem, N. C.. and Homer Rodeheaver, chief aide to the former ball player, lfas written Osmond ■Barringer, Speedway manager, that the evangelist is enthused over seeing one of the great speed ruees. In act, the evangelist will bring a party of “five or six” to join him on this breath-taking occasion. A great time is the anticipation of Mr. Sunday, with respect to vjiis approaching novel experience at Charlotte May 11, and Mr. Rodeheaver made that, clear when he said “Mr. Sunday is particularly anx ious” to see the speeed demons perform. | In .Missouri one family has 15 ehil f.dren, all boys, and we call that raising I a rough house. r * Somebody’s always kicking the seat l of our government. CONCORD COTTON MARKET SATURDAY, MAW t 11125 Cotton .24 .Cotton Seed .48 CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected Weekly by Cline A Moose) i . Figures nkmed represent prices paid for produoe on the market; Eggs -28 Own —— $1.35 I Sweet potatoes ! 1.50 Turkeys 25*8.38 Onion, sl.s* [Peak - $3.08 iejoubjry R ' MG * W ' LLOYD j Seen as Bashful Small Town Boy in Hisff Latest Comedy. E Variety i* the spice of life, and it is | also the secret of success in making good > motion pictures. Many stars fall' into a rut because they insist Upon making the same line of pictures and using the Bame kinds of characterizations. They never change because they feel the pub lic is used to seeing them in a certain ■type of pietnre. i Suck is not the case, however, with i 'Harold Lloyd, whose latest feature Patbe- p comedy, .“Girl Shy ’’ will be keen Mon- | day, Tuesday and Wednesday at the § New Concord Theatre. Harold has for- E tnaately discovered that “mixing them t up a bit” is the secret of success. He J haa never made two comedies even re- “ motely alike, considering his big hits, ' “Dr. Jack,” Safely Last,” “Why Wor ry?" and now “Girl Shy.” He has ' jumped from small town situations to a ‘ South American revolution, from por- 1 traying a doctor to a ribbon clerk. New ■ in his latest, he has again strives' for something different from anything he has ! ever made. He is seen in “Girl Shy” in ar\ entirely novel characterization, as . a bashful small- tows boy who is an , apprentice to his uncle, a tailor. He , makes a secret study of girls, although , not a very accurate one, and the more , he studies them,, the more he fears them. , Weekly Cotton Review. , New York, May 1. —The chief factor j in the cotton market during the past week has been the weather news for : the southwest. The rains which de- ( veloped in Oklahoma and north Texas gradually spread to the south and the 1 , market worked lower as the southwest , ern crop condition improved with July contract selling off to 23.92 and October to 23.65- during the earlier part of the ' , week. ' n - At these priee’s representing declines I . of approximately 2 to 2 1-2 cents per ] ! pound from the high levels of early last ( ! March, the market showed signs of hav- 1 ing been pretty well liquidated of specu- ] lative long accounts and prlc'cp turned j upward toward .the end of the week on ’ covering. The .feeling among traders here appeared to be that all immediate 1 need for moisture in the southwest had j t been satisfied and that enough rain had j 1 fallen to give the crop a somewhat de- | ■ layed' start in Texas. This idea of the j southwestern situation was coupled with continued reports of a favorable- start for the crop in almost all other sections of the belt, apt! reports by a number of private authorities pointing to an in crease in acreage of 4 to 6.3 per’ cent, j and also an increase in the use of ferti lizers. These features, however, failed to stirn- j ul&te much selling after she break to . about the 24-cent level for July and 1 nearly 23 1-2 cents for October, and the rallies which followed were ommotoH bv the prompt stopping ot the May notices in the local marKet. The notices, repre- • seating about 112,000 bales of cotton, j wtre taken by large trade interests who j were active buyers of May against sales ! of July at 33 to 35 points on the first j notice day ami the difference between j May and July after narrowed materially, j This was taken as suggesting that ( there would be shipments out of the local ( certified stock before- the end of the sum mer and there were rumors that between , 10,000 and 12,000 bales of cotton would ij be shipped to .Inpan thiwjmantn. No improvement was noted by traders here I in the news from the goods markets, but j there was some trade buying of early 1 new crop deliveries as prices approached the 23 1-2-cent level and the rallies late in the week, while largely the result of S ION !l | Venetian A morel ta Cream. | s Soft as the down that lines a | j ‘ I chestnut burr, sweet smelling as M i the secretive trailing argutus, con- j ] ’ ! coctod by a clever Frenchman — | 1 i | that is a valuable aid to those who 5 ] I have difficulty in retaining powder j ' j on the face. Carefully and evenly j | smooth this cream over the entire ‘ 1 ! face until an invisible film is form ! ed, then dust on a little powder to 1 5 give the complexion a soft, velvet- j : | like finish. Two sizes: $1 and $2 i a pot. K :| Gibson Drug Store § i m ■ el ia The RexaU Store H I See Our New Wrist and Strap Watches 1 VOU wSI he inmmsttdin these I 1 new designs m FtlgtoWatches. | : These new models represent the 1. . finest deydqpkiient ot the art of 1 watcl imaking. And while they are S unusually beautiful, no sacrifice §j . | has bail vadi la 1 accuracy nor in the quality which {§ i [ assudea long years of dependable | tl will be a pleasure ior us to Eg ' show these models to anyone | iutHoted in watches. 9 STARNEB-MILLER. 1 PARKER C 9, I S' |[ Jewelers awd Dptomat- 1 pnMMNyMi in in■ nrmm I 1 - ’ f| -CITIZENS BANK AND TRUST COMPANY J Concord, N. C. :5 ; |> ■mM [ lits The Home of Good |c Banking ? ;; Resources Over One Mil- j g n si covering Were prompted by reports of a continued- steady spot situation in the South. A No* Artificial Wood. ' London: May 2. A new material (known as “plastic wood" has been per fected for such uses as repairing furni ture, filling crackis in wood, restoring ‘picture frames and Ijroken comers, and filling nail holes. This artificial wood can be worked and finished with carpen ter's tools. It is dilivered in the form of a thick paste that can be moulded to any shape. When exposed to the air it hardens into a tough, water-proof mater- OOOPQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO j AMBULANCE j| SERVICE if | Day or Night !:']!; Call No. 9 i ’ * Wilkinson’s Funeral Home | I Open Day and Night ]j| Phone No. 9 “Any Hour’’ ]|| 00000000000000000000000000 I Just Arrived I . FIVE NEW STYLES in Blond Kid and Satins All Widths 1 «• RUTH-KESLER SHOE STORE % > ■ ■ ■ ' iwnraip ga,?rrr | Tires! Tires! 1 Why invest your money in a tire that you are told is |1 j just as good 4 * When GOODYEAR is no higher m price. . A "big stock on hand. All sizes. We sell- Sinclair and Sr Oils. adsworth Co. HARDWARE STORE hutch Street Phone 30 ml’ that can scarcely be distinguished I from real wood; FuaifaMMiiiafiata to Convene. J j Memphis, Tenn., May 2.—The seventh J ; annual convention of the World's j 'Christian Fundamentals’ Association, i which will open in this city tomorrow, ] Kttdtl have as speakers William J. Bryan, life. Reuben A. Torrey and others of I j national prominence. The convention sessions will continue through the eom ihg week. 1 Fashionable women in Paris, who have (their hair bobbed, visit the hairdresser , (twice a day to have their coiffures s<*t ■ , ’so- .that not a single hair is oat of place. J 4 f*i iffL'ja-:;.- 1 ' j 50000000000000000000000001 j ?! ; Musette’s Remov- j 3.1 Sfilc i ? j i:a i • p i | Continues AH ’ ; j Week I h | 1 j; 1 j I ; At Our Old Stand in Cannon I Building ! We move Monday into , ; our new quarters next to j 1 Cline's Pharmacy. 2 [•j See our line, of Mother’s 8 i Day greeting cards and X !!j mottoes. B | i Musette> I PHONE 579 | B a 1 O I - Come Down After Suffer And SaveMoftey at 8 * • \ . «■ v I Browns-Cannon Co. t 1 ——Store - Wide—— j Removal Sale Store Closes at Id Tonight, J Shoes, Suits,v Shirts y | > Can Be Purchased For lc Straw and Felt Hats Going Cheap - i 1 it—l—i. —L....15l . Ht» Broilers Wanted. Heavy Hens in Demand ,r f The poultry market is again very active and we guktoitee you 20c per pound -tor hens, up to and including Thursday, Wai pay from 35c to 45c per pound for Frferrand Broilers de pending on size and quality. . « We believe this is the last chance to sell hens at 20c as prices wili surely decline as friers becomemore plentiful. Don’t be afraid you will bring’ ns too many. > ■ - 3 .; v , C H. BARRIER & CO. ! attt-an W. Depot Street. —. _ ... " 1 aaaaaaaaa mm . ;tr-i I^BitSfcdCaa^ijflajaiB i P"** **TnlnM '|i A Good Spring Tonic For Your Car 1 J|| us grind your valves, tighten your bearings and * ! '< i Reline your Brakes for you. All work guaranteed to give ' | satisfaction. I Expert radiator repairing and all prices reasonable. I Corl Motor Co. X „ “ TH ® HOME OF GOOD DODGE SERVICE” g w. Depot St. Ptom, «ao BLOND SATIN Two new ones in Strap Pumps that can be worn with or without bow. This Popular Pump on sale tomorrow d*fj AA atsd next week at Vw.wU < IVEY’S ‘THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES” 1 DON’T FORGET YOUR MOTHER j She Is Your Best Girl 5l We Are Now Taking Orders For Mother’* Day Candy ; j ' '■■■?• , Phone H* Your Order Today yl; f 1 • I f.* • f v :*, y Don’t Disappoint Year Mother | CABARRUS DRUG CO. PAGE FIVE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 2, 1925, edition 1
5
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75