Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / May 18, 1925, edition 1 / Page 3
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Monday, May 18, 1925 iji Don’t Forget When : :j! in Need of a TIRE iji There Is None Better Eg]®! \ GOODYEAR |l| jjj ]!> We Have Them From j| 3 ’ jj $6.25 Up 11 I ||| All New Stock | | Yorke & Wadsworth || THE PLACE TO BUY TIRES e! I UNION AND CHURCH STS. § 8 Phone 30 5 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC I! LISTEN IN! Broadcasting Good Shoe News , Values talk for themselves and they carry a message of s' b SAVINGS. jj! j|! We’re offering wonderful values and if you are fair to ]i| !i! yourself and economy you’ll visit our store and get your '!' ;!j Shoes. !|i Beautiful Patents, .Satins, White'Kids, always in de- !j| ]i| mand. Dressy and desired by good dressers. Latest pat- ]!j j;i ,er " s $3.45 to $6.95 : Special, sl9g T° $2.9 5 PARKER’S SHOE STORE |l| PHONE 897 WHERE YOU SAVE j|; 4 KXK)OOOOOOOOOOCX)OOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOU SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO IKELVINATOR | jSSiere are seventeen KELVINATORS in homes in Concora giving 1 !' perfect satisfaction. Now is the time to give your order for a KEL- j'| VINATOR and be free from the expense and trouble of obtaining ice 'I 1 1 during the coming hot weather. i[i J. Y. PHARR & BRO. j Phone 103, 127 or 208 j|i OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOQQOOQOOOOOO I A Good Spring Tonic For Your Car || ; Let us grind your valves, tighten your bearings and ! Reline your Brakes for you. All work guaranteed to give satisfaction. / [ Expert radiator repairing and all prices reasonable. Corl Motor Co. “THE HOME OF GOOI/ DODGE SERVICE” W. Depot St. * Phone 630. i 00090000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQO BEST : 1 CEMENT i| I PLASTER i; ; LIME Mortar Color, Plaster Paris ;ij | j PHONE 74 CRAVEN’S KERR STREET O I' Phone 686 For Choice Fresh Meats i; Groceries, Fresfr Fruits and Vege- j i tables i j Each Order Given Prompt Attention | Sanitary Grocery Co. H A REAL GOOD PLACE TO TRADE” POCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOoOOO .lilts MID TIME PEM-ITPIWS The Fenny Ads Get Results—Try Them THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE \ ' c In and About the City i Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle. WOMAN’S POWER. | ' The T T plift. \ i There are people Hint are not able to , | aecord woman the power that she has, , generally in n latent state, but when a 1 crisis comes all that power is brought in j action and sejdom do you find a widow that does not meet her problems and work out agreeable and successful re sults. The other day this writer received invi- 1 tation to join a host in doing honor to a ( mother in Israel —Mrs. Margaret Mnriah Miller, formerly of No. 8 township, Ca- , barrus county, but the pnst few years a r resident of Hickory, N. Q. Mrs. Miller , was paying a visit to friends and rela , tives in the St. John!* neighborhood. In' this there is nothipg, specially remarka ble ; but just wait a moment. It had been near unto tliisty years since this writer, had seen the lady, but when he approached unannounced she arose ji(Nt as* spry as one of these charming young things we see bobbing amongst us and greeted us, “Well, .Tim, how are you?” And this is not remarkable, either—but wait a moment. This lady Mrs. Miller will in December celebrate her 97th birth day. There is nowhere in the state to be found a person whose faculties are any dearer or more alert. Soon after the War Between the States . she became a widow with three children to care for,and an estate that had been . somewhat encumbered by the big-hearted- . ness, generosity and trustfulness of her husband, who was one of the outstand- , ing and lending farmers of that period, i Now, here's where the power of woman is ( called into play. She fnced the problem i with a strong, brave heart, wiped away remembrances, reared a family that did credit to an honored name, her two daughters becoming the wives of two prominent ministers of the gospel and < who contributed a marked and worthy service befitting the duties of this high , catling. To show the love of the community of ■ which she laid been no small part in its activities, of state and church, more than one hundred people gathered at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Wingnrd and gave themselves over to the pleasant bus iness of making this young-old woman un derstand that though she had been long absent from the neighborhood there re mained a loving and abiding esteem for her. This fine old woman, while she eats heartily three full meals daily and sleeps a gentle sleep as of n child, is concerned chiefly about the success and prosperity of her friends and acquaintances and is not like the old lady in eastern North Carolina, *vho, when asked in what she was most interested, replied, “my vit tals,’’.t On the, opposite page we carry in the group the picture of Mrs. Miller along with four generations. It is seldom that we find in the fleh five generations, as is \ the case in this group picture. I This gathering together to do honor to [ the aged is' a beautiful thought, and the ; assembled host at the home of Mr. W.in | gard to do honor to this gentle mother in j Israel, who carries her ninety-six years j with grace and fine spirit, were theinsel [ ves the beneficiaries of a happy occasioh. I “Bad Company” Outstanding Film Suc cess of the Season. I One of the best pictures that has ever [ played this city is now showing at the j Concord theatre. | There are many reasons that “Bad | Compnny” is one of the best film pro | ductions of the year. The first reason is, because it is based on a story that is a j story and is original in every detail. The I second reason is, beeuuse it carries on its 1 roster a line-up of stars that would be a credit to any picture. The third and most important reason is, because it was directed and acted with an eye to keep ing it natural. Now you have in a paragraph why “Bad Company” is one of the best pic | tures of the year. I | The story is that of a young girl, lier [ self a success as a Broadway actress, ) who would save her brother from the [ clutches of “Bad Company,” in the form j of a bad woman who has designs on the | young man’s fortune. The girl succeeds j in freeing her brother but only after eom [ promising the man she loves, i As for the cast. Who can question [ the starring combination of Conway ) Tearle, as the sacrificing lover and Madge j Kennedy, as the girl. I)o you remember [ Charles Emmett Mack, the boy who play- I ed the brother in D. W. Griffith’s 1 “Dream Street”? Well, he plays the ) same dramatic role in this picture. Oth l ers in the cast who help make ’Bad Coin [ pany” the big picture that it is, are Bige [ i low Cooper and Lucille Lee Stewart. t . i Deeds Recorded Saturday. I The following deeds were recorded > Saturday: j C. E. and J. G. Lowe to J. A. Wine \ coff for $245, lots in tract known as [ Lowe brothers farm in No. 4 township. [ Sale of the same tract by Mr. Winecoff [.to J. C. Helms. ; A. L. Brown and B. W. Durham to t' J. G. Lowe for $244, several lots in [ Clinehart, Kannapolis suburb. II B. L. Umberger to Wade Cline two k tracts in I’arkwood, No. 4 township, the [ first for $1,020 and the second for SOBO. | J. N. Kennedy to Mart T. Hatley for f $2,500. property in West Concord. Vancouver, B. C., now has more than | forty regular steamship, lines operating from its port. ■ More than a third of the rubber boots manufactured in the United States are made in Massachusetts. COOLIDGE FAVORS i SHIP SALE TO FORD President Ready to Get Rid of Idle Tonnage If It Can Be Done Legally. Washington, May 15. President Coolidge indicated today that he might favor the proposition to sell Henry Ford several hundred idle ships now in control of the Shipping Board- The mat ter hns not been taken up with linn, but he is ready to get rid of the snips if it can be done in compliance with the law. The President has no information nbout the Ford offer except that gained by reading the newspapers. He does not expect the members of the Shipping Board to consult him. for they are j authorized to net. Chairman O’Connor of the Shipping Bon rd will not return to Washington until Monday. In his negotiations with Mr. Ford he is not supported by other, members of the board. It was made ap parent today, however, that the Presi dent and other lending Republicans of the Administration believe the ships should he operated or sold. The White House is relying on provisions of the •Tones Act for euildnnee apd Senator •Tones, who engineered the net tlirongh the Senate, declares action should bo taken. “I would be delighted to see Mr. Ford go into the shipping business on a large scale.” Senator .Tones said today. “Judging from his success in other lines of industry he would succeed at this where others might fail, with his financial resource.- he cou’d and would stand the losses that he would eneounter at first until he could bulid up a paying trade. Transporting his own freight would probably net him n profit.” “Something should be done anout this matter of the laid up ships,” Senator Jones added. “The American vessels en gaged in overseas commerce must he replaced sometime, and replaced by up to-date ships. The fact that the Govern ment has 800 or more laid-up ships would militate against any plan for building new ones.” BULLETS WHIZ ON CROWDED STREET Deputy Sheriff and Escaped Prisoner i Stage Pistol Duel in Goldsboro. Goldsboro, May 16.—Center street, Goldsboro’s man thoroughfare, was the scene of a near riot here at six o’clock this afternoon when “Chink” Bhodes, deputy sheriff, and Leroy Nobles, es caped prisoner, engaged in a pistol duel while men, women and children scattered in every direction to avoid being hit by the flying bullets. The af fair was the result of a pail delivery in which three prisoners made their es cape. When/ Constable Cuddington open ed the door of the jail he was met by a blow in the head and when he fell to the boor three negro prisoners rushed out. One of them had a gun and Nobles seized the constable's weapon. When the nlarm was given Sheriff Grant went on the trail of one negro who same to a halt immediately after the sheriff shot at him. Deputy Sheriff Rhodes followed the other two and one escaped. The chase of the other led thrdngh the main part town and when Center street was reached the negro ran up 'the sidewalk turning and firing at the 1 Sheriff until he had used up lvc bullets. Rhodes fired in the nir at first but when he saw that the negro would not stop and was liable to elude capture in the dense crowd, he shot at him twice in quick succession, both bullets entering the negro's right side and seriously wound ing him. A horse was shot by a flying bullet from the prisoner's gun and that some of the hundreds of persons who were on the street at the time were not hit is nothing short of miraculous. Activity is life. Inactivity is death. In Muscle Builder for June, a Macfad den publication, the secret of muscle building is expounded by such authori ties as Benny Leonard who tells “How I Won the Championship,” “Sid Terris Tells His Trick” and gives some infor mation to coming boxers on foot work. “I Have Dodged Death a Dozen Times” is the inside story of clowing—it is not so funny being a clown sometimes. “How to Develop a Wrestler's Powerful Mus cles,” is made plain by no less an au thority than Bernarr Macfadden him self. SMOTHERING SPELLS AND NERVOUSNESS OVERCOME Concord Lady Says HERB JUICE Help- ] ed Her Beyond AJI Expectations. , “It is truly a miracle that way HERB i JUICE lias restored my health and 1 strength after I had suffered so long, and j to show my appreciation and gratitude , for what it has done for me, I gladly give , this statement in the hope that it may 1 induce other sufferers to take it and se cure the same relief that I did,” said , Mrs. Dora McDonald, Reed street. Con- , cord. N. C., in a recent interview with the i HERB JUICE representative, “In my opinion,” Mrs. McDonald further remark- ' ed, “Herb Juice is the best medicine on ( the market today for such ailments as I , had, namely: indigestion, constipation, i nervousness and smothering spells. I am thankful to say that the first bottle | did me lots of good and since I have con- ( tinued taking it for over a month I have ( been entirely relievew of the gas and in- i digestion pains, also the smothering ' spells which gave so much trouble have j disappeared and my nerves are now un- , der better control than they have been ( for many months and I really feel like my former self. I never dreamed that 1 any medicine would do so much for a J person as HERB JUICE lias done for me in such a short time. I have gained in weight and strength from the day I start ed using this wonderful remedy and , through its natural action I have been . completely relieved of constipation and i my system is now in excellent working 1 order, I have really been benefitted be- 1 yond all expectations. HERB JUICE is J the most effective system cleanser and regulator I have ever found. I do not i believe there is another medicine made to- 1 day that would have helped me like HEBB \ I JUICE has, and I take great pleasure in | making this statement so that others may be benefitted as I have been.” I Hundreds are calling at Gibson Drug 1 Co. to see the HERB JUICE man to ' I learn more of the great remedy that is re- i Roving so many thousands of Concord and Kannapolis people. Also sold in Kannap olis by F. L. Smith Drug Co. i «»®r TOU stores F “ 50-54 SOUTH UNION STREET, CONCORD, N. C. New Frocks of Silk Crepe Printed Patterns At This Low Price! t r i » njhterfaSrafcdMa <* umwfawsftw <aana Have you some place to go? Then get all dressed up in one of these entrancing, inexpensive printed crepe Frocks which this Store is showing. They are made in such becoming styles! And printed crepe is quite the thing this Spring, you know. In Attractive Colors and Color Combinations The colors are beyond description! Some have dark backgrounds and others have light. The effects obtained in the various color combinations sim ply “melt in your mouth.” Just think of smart Dresses like these at this very low price! $9.90 T 0 $14.75 Ramona Cloth When Yon Want Strength For house dresses, chil dren’s clothing, nurses’ uniforms, and fancy work, we endorse “Ra mona” Cloth 1 Yon will find this splendid material only at this store. 34- inch width, the yard* 25c AND 39c Palmolive Toilet Soap 4 bars 25c Rick-Rack Braid tzed; white Baby Pants Os Pure Gum Rubber Natural color, medhna and large size, each* 23c Ginghams In Plaids and Checks This tin usual nhe gimm ham is 24 indies wide. Yd. dc 00000000000000000000000000 |Pay Us I A Visit | | Have you ever visited a!' ' modern cleaning plant? If ]! i not I would like to extend 1 ] ] you an invitation to see o-*rs. !j ] ; See how much dirt and ]i j ; grease comes out of your ]i i i clothes —every garment be- 1 ! | ing cleaned in sweet, white ij | | gasoline, eliminating entire- | | 1 fy the gasoline smell from ]! ! ! the garments. M. R.Pounds ] | Cleaning and Tailoring ]! PHONE 420 ! For Guaranteed Satisfaction | i REMEMBER PENNY APB ABB CASE ghoeiay8u Honor Muslin jupramr Value This is our “Honor” Muslin, and it we feel honored to sell such ; splendid quality at such a ! low price. The yard, Unbleached *6c n—^ m Laundry Soap White Naptha 6 large bars of extra good quality Laundry Soap for 25c Sewing Thread J. & P. Coats White, black and colors, , Spool 4c Silk Thread In All Shades Corticelli, the kind that doesn’t tangle. Spool 6c 5 Elected President of Rutherford College. jj Hickory, May 15.—Prof.. W. F. 5 Starnes, superintendent of the Waxhaw < schools, has been elected president of S the Rutherford College in place of M. 5 T. Hirehaw, who resigned a little while 5 a &°- 5 Professor Starnes is a native of J heisey^^as^ware [ i Heisey’s Glassware added to our House Furnishing De partment and we offer it to our customers as another line i of the Highest Quality. We now have in stock an assortment of Heisey Glass- I, ware. f j | We have also added to our stock a complete line of high j est quality of Silver Ware. Ritchie Hardware Co YOUR HARDWARE STORE PHONE 117 a [I, -.— PAGE THREE Need Muslin ? Buy Belle Isle Good value in muslin for many household needs. 36-inch bleached, or 39-inch width, un bleached, at this striking price, the yard. 12^c Milan Straws For the Boy This new Rah Rah Straw Hat has contrast ing colored edge; trim xd with band to match; !WMt; anlv— -49c 10 98c Union county, holds the A. B. and M. A. degrees from Trinity College has taught at Rutherford College, was for a while principal of the Monr'oe high school. Big tobacco company lias gone broke. ' Profits went up in smoke.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 18, 1925, edition 1
3
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