Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / May 21, 1925, edition 1 / Page 3
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Thursday, May 21, 1»25 VrfWfTAT > 3T^^rAM ? Recital at Mont Amoena Seminary Thurs-j day Evening, May 91st. The 10th stndeiit recital at Mont Amoe na Seminary will take plnce this evening. The program will be given by Misses Al bert Pearle Boweta ami Gladys Copper, assisted by Mr. Fred Voting. The fol lowing program will be rendered:' Andres et- Phillipe ; ' Rubenstein Albert Pearle Bowers-Gladys Copper Sonata Pathe ’tique Beethoven Gladys Copper . - ) Scherzo Fantasia ' __l 2u Spross Albert Pen rle Bowers \ The Star Rogers Kashmiri Woodfore»Fimler Dab's Gwinter Be ’er La n'slide_fSt riokland Mr. Fred Young Easter Dawn in Hollywood BbwLCadmnn Antomne : a-- Chaminade Fantasia Mozart Caprice Vionnois Kriesler Gladys <'opper First Mazurka in F Minor --Saint Saens Prelude -•—, Roekmauioff Makurea i Gehring The Flatterer y Chaminnde Albert Pearle Bowers Ah My Beloved : W. Stickles A Brown Bird Singing Haydn Wood My Little Banjo Wm. Dichmogt Mr. Fred Young 1 , Nocturne in F Sharp CkopM Gladys Copper Rondo Copreccloso Mendelssohn >1 •, Albert Pearle Bowers „S Brllliaute * __l Czerny Albert Pearle Bowers-Gladys Copper 3T Attend Party in Charlotte. Bf*. it. E. Ridenhour, Jr., Mrs. H. Gisjjibson 'and hire. Nan Pickard wijl attend a party 1 given by Mrs. J. N. Sloan at 3tPr home in Charlotte this afternoon. Mti: Alph Gosney, of Raleigh, is honor gust 'of the affair. .v£?Te Entertain Colonial Dames. Cabarrus county committe of the Colonial Dames will hold its regular monthly meeting Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. A. Cannon, on North Union street: The meeting will be a very important one. having as honor guests a$ is Mrs. A. M. Waddell, of Wilmington, who is president of the State Colonial Dames ;j Mrs. Westray Battle, of Asheville, who; is vice president: Mrs. R. A. Dunn, who is chairman of the Mecklenburg commit tee. and Mrs. C. C. Hook, of Charlotte. Mrs. Waddell and Mrs. Ba(He, togeth er, with Mrs. Wayne Cqok, who is a national officer, were' honor guests at a luncheon given by Mrs. Dunn in Char lotte Wednesday. Attend Luncheon in Charlotte. Mrs. Robert Jones. Mrs. W. W. Flowe, Mrs. J. A. Cannon, Mrs. George L. Pat terson, Mrs. T. H. Webb and Miss .Tenn Coltrnne attended a luncheon in Char lotte Wednesday given by Mrs.' A A. Dunn. ~ ~St tending Sulgrave Manor Luncheon. At the Sulgrave Manor luncheon which is being given in Charlotte today, the following will attend from Concord. Mrs. T. I. Davis. Mrs. V. A. Means, Airs. Rob ert Jones, Mrs. .T. A. Cannon, Mrs. R. P. Gibsbn, Mrs. A. G. Odell, Mrs. C. B. Wagoner, Mrs. C. A. Cannon, Mrs. J. W. Cannon. Miss .Grace Brown Saund ers, Mrs. George L.. Patterson and Miss jinn Colt rahe, " The luncheon is to be one of the most elaborate ever given in Charlotte, a num ber of guests attending from Winston- Salem, Gastonia, Salifdmry and other North Carolina cities. The first cargo of hard molasses recent ly arrived in the United States in bas kets from Java. CORE THROAT k. J tonsilitis or hoarseness, gargle with warm ash w . water. Rub Vicksirirer throat and cover with a •y hot flannel cloth. Swal low slowly small pieces. VVapoßub ~' m " m 1,1 ... " df ' *■ j W Aspect •v w r it i Holdß, ||| BELLfiBARRIS FUN- Inl HI Phone MO [H Nidi* MR 860-159 L ill] V , I Mr. and Airs. B. K- Ridenhour and I Mrs. H. G. Gibson spent Wednesday in Greensboro visiting Mrs. J. L. Thacker. * • • Miss Charlotte Browji, of New Castle, Pa., who has been the guest of Mrs. P. G. Sherbondy, left this morning for Pem broke Va., to visit friends. -.<• » - , Norman Alston. R. A. Hullender and C. J. Williamß have returned from , Greensboro, where they attended the ses ■ sums of the Grand Lodge of Odd Fel lows. v •• • * .Toe'F. Goodamn left this morning with his brother, Sam Goodman, for El Paso, Texas. - Mr. Goodman will remain in El Paso for sometime for’ his health. Sam Goodman will return, to Concord next week. • • • f)t. and Mrs. G. L- Lang and son have returned from Snow Hill, where they : visited for ten dajs. ME and Mrs. J. B. Sherrill wiU leave early Friday morning for Asheville to visit their daughter, Miss Cottrell Other rill. * ' • 7 »• » t Misses Sara Ellen Linker, Margaret Ritchie and Sara Louis Cline have rep turned home from Queen’s College, Char lotte, wheTe they wfA in school the past -year. ' 0 • • Mrs. J. B. Linker and Miss Labasare Barnett are spending the day in Char lotte. , , - Y. Y. Suther has returned, from Jones boro, where he had been called to see his little grandsdn, K. G.- Stone, Jr., . who is’seriously ill. The, condition of the little fellow is unimproved. Miss -Helen Suther, who accompanied her father, did'not return, but *will spend some time visiting Sir. and Mrs. Stone. I Miss Ora yQaid Watts, of Istaseo, ' Texas, who is a student of Queens Col i lege, at Charlotte, is the guest of Miss Lelia Cannon. Miss Sudie Mae Dry and James Walk er, seniors of Lenoir-Rhyne! College, are i spending their senior vacation with home j folks. ■ . ’ Misses Zue Yerton and Martha Bost . and A. S. Deaton spent Wednesday in Charlotte. ; ’ Mrs. Gorman to Entertain Woman - s Club [ The meeting of the .Woman's Club. \ which was postponed from last week on account of the rainy weather, will be held Friday afternoon at 4 o’clock on Mrs. B. F. Rogers' law’n, Mrs. Ada Rogers Gorman acting as hostess, *4 «• ’ An elaborate program has been pK»- ! pared for the affair which is to be in tlje form" - of a lawn ! fete. A number of the city's most talented musicians will render selections and the kindergarten Will give a May Pole Dance* -All members of the club are urged to , be present at this meeting which is the , last of the year. , ,> i i 453 'Llour bride! > will prefer an Orange Blossom 'Wedmiuj %ing Gold,Platmum < or t , exQuisitelijjeiueled^ STARNES-MILLER-PARKER COMPANY '■ WjiT ~7' r ' ’ 77 | The Personal ;|i | Element 8 Professional skill is not the ! ! X only requirement of a fun- | ; X era! He must pos- j j' (O sess a v kindly and sympa- ! ! jl thetid personality and so j tfi impress those he serves. g ]8 Our service is more in he 8 8 natdre of the kindly assist- 8 x ance of helpful friends and it g O attempts in some measure 0 to relieve the heavy burden X of your loss. g R Willdnson’s 1 Funeral Home | PHONE DAY OR NIGHT NO. 0 X Ambnianw X N* C. Service 8 Ig ] "fe * uu "* A . -.. A -v; THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE MARTIN KLtJTTZ RAISES ] APPLES PROFITABLY Finds That Work of Sprayinff Https j His Crop—Keeps Them Over Winter. As an object' tssson of what can be ; done by farmers if they take advantage of the opportunities afforded them, Coun- , ty Agent R. D. Goodman is pointing , out the work of Martin Khittz, Cabarrus county farmer, in building up his apple orchard. Mr. Kluttx, according- to Mr. Good man, let his apple orchard remain un cultivated from the time a law passed in North Carolina against •■'the . making of liquors until six years ago. After considerable persuasion, he .de cided to begin raising this fruit again. Since beginning, his orchard has been most successful from a financial stand point. Last year he sold 223 crates of apples from the two acres of trees. He is also, gays Mr. Goodman, a firm believer in spraying and attributes most of his success to the fact, that he sprays bis fruit each sprinff. •He brought several- apples which he has kept since last Fall into Concord jq show how that they can be kept if proper attention is paid tq ,tbe picking and packing. / ! American Screen Stage Lead World. "The Ameriwtn stage and screen has .more gpod players than any t country in the world today,” says Dorothy Cum ming, one-time star of the Australian stage. Miss Gumming is now in pic tures. She has a prominent supporting! role with Ben Lyon and Anna Q. Nilsson in First National’s 1 “One- Way which is showing at the Concord Theatre/ today. ,1 “There is no disparagement of Eng- j land and other* countries," -Miss Cum-* mlng says. “The reason is that Amcr-\ ica lures away the best players of other , lands because -this country pays them better.” Miss Gumming is a native of Austra lia, where she starred with H. B. Irv ing. sou of Sir Henry Irving, and with | Cyril Maude. , Entertains at Dinner Party. Miss Adelaide Foil was honoree at a dinner party given her by her mother, Mrs. W. A. Foil, Tuesday evening at her home on North Union street, the oc casion for the dinner being the 15th an niversary of Miss’Foil’s birth. After dinner tl)e guests were given a theatre party and later played bridge. . Guests at the affair were : Annie Louise Hoover. Frances Boger, Mary Lore Flowe, Ruth Dayvault, Ruth Moore, Elizabeth Ross, Orchard Lafferty, Francis Pickard, Connor Smith. Aleck MacFadyen, Steph en Morris, Chafes KCstler and Rufus Brown. At The Theatres. “Golden Bed”, starring Rod Laßocque; Lillian Rich, Theodore Kosloff, Vern Reynolds, Varner Baxter and .Tulin Faye, is being shown today at the Star. Jane Novak in “The Lullaby” and a comedy are the features being shown to day at the Pastime. ’ Ben Lyon and Anna Q. Nilsson and Marjorie Day in “One Way Street” at the Concord Theatre today. Among the issues to come before the National Federatjo nos Postoffice Clerks, at its annual cohveilttion jfi Kansas Cify' next September are’: A rridre liberalized retirement law, 44-hour week, time dif ferential for night workers, ousting of the stop-watch and-’qpeed-up methods and establishment of a civil service court of appeal in cases of demotion or dismis sal. .». -. ■ I Let Your j Next Battery "jf ■BeAn, . EXIDE Use Only the Best mO—DMC—»’ YOUR BEAUTIFUL WINTER GARMENTS ' \ i You have many things you expect to wear again next fall and winter—furs, wraps, ; overcoats, cloaks, suits, silk gowns, dresses. . Store them away fresh and clean and they will be same until needed. Send them to us today. lip Bob’s Dry CleaniDg Co. Phone 787 i * '■ ' 'I. ."=B, ..y^^4*' fist*. F- ' •. ; ■*rK-. DRY LAW A FARCE,, L SENATORS DECIDE , Survey Convinces Cbnunilfee Hasty In- i quiry Would Be of N 0 Service. Special to New York World. ’ .Washington, May IK.—The Couzens committee, composed of Senators Couz ens, Mich.; Watson, Indiana, and Ernest, Kentucky, Republicans, and Jones, New) Mexico, and King, Utah, Demorrat.n has found that prohibition enforcement is | largel ya farce. > Conditions revealed In n brief inquiry | are so bad the committee will not make * an investigation now. The task is con sidered too great to be accomplished ini a few weeks. Members of the committee have heard | a few witnesses and surveyed the situa-1 tion hurriedly, enough to realize that! it would be imimssible to do any good I in n hasty inquiry and will make public f the testimony taken within the next day or tiro. ! N«w Legislation Suggested In making a report to the Senate-llext December the coihmittee, if not as a whole then as individual members, will present facts to sliow that if an investi gation is undertaken' it should be un hampered and complete and conducted with a view to bringing out all the facts. Several members of the committee trailt to recommend the turning over of the prohibition unit to the • department .of justice, but feel it should rest where It is now until the new assistant secre ’ tary of the treasury, Col. Lincoln C. An drews, has had ample opportunity to * show what he can do toward suppressing I'tlie liquor traffickers. , Dry States Growing Wetter Facts brought out, show that while the government forces arc driving the :rum runners out at one point, other rum [runners are active elsewhere. Condi itions in the original prohibition states I are growing worse instead of better/ They have been neglected. I When the Couzens committee gets ready to make its report, a determined effort to prevent, a discouraging showing j will be made by dry leaders, but meml - believe /lie trnfh should be de.velop- : ed and brought out to convince the peo ple generally that the Volstead act is being disregarded n»d is' falling down. It was pointed out today that any casual inquiry into the fact shows that I spasdomic spurtfe, against violators of the j dry laws are not effective. Liquor con tinues to come in from the sea, across the Mexican and Canadian borders, and from the stills of the cities, and moun tain eaves in the South. “We found a very, very bad situa tion.'’ said a mejmber of the Senat copi mittee to The- World correspondent to-1 I day. “Efforts to enforce the laws in ] many sections the country have proven farcial. I think that we should allow j Col. Andrews to try out his program, i and see what he can accomplish.” Post and Flagg’s Cotton Letter. ] New York, May 2D- —The feature has, been the action of July in all markets; with reports, that that position is sewed up tight in ■ New. Orleans by spot in- 1 tei-ests who need the cotton and will demand delivery. Room has been engng- J ed for a considerable quantity of the lpenl stock here to. gp,,abroad, with pre dictions in spot circW that, .further en gagements will shortly, he made. This is n rather sharp contrast to recent talk that a good deal of what has been ex ported would come bapk here as cotton •was-cheaper in-foreign markets than in this country. ! Strength in July will not- necessarily pull up the new crops very far but neither will it serve *0 depress them to any extent. Based on latest advices as tp curtailment by mills it would look that there has been more talk. than action in that respect and a considerable degree of exaggeration in the talk. There is curtailment and it. 'is a mathematical certinty there will have to and that the volume of exports will have to be reduced in drastic fash ion for sheer lack of cotton. There is mighty little cotton left in the south outside of snaps, bollies and I other dogtail stuff and the* rate at which the supply has been distributed this season is a new record in the his tory of cotton. Present levels are much below the average price at -which this 14 1-2 million crop was distributed and in spite of present favorable crop pros-, pects and the increase in acreage there is no certainty that we shall have as much next season. Guaranteeing deliver ies to the trade by sales for short Ac counts at considerable discount from the SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY j j LA'RGE PIECES ALUMINUM 98c • | Dependable Merchandise——^ CHARLES STORES CO., Inc. Sc TO $2.98 DEPT. STORE ;• ;![ 34 South Union St., Concord N. C. MHWnge price for this crop looks to be C attended with some risk to require ( some working out if it, is to provf a ' profitable operation. , i POST AND FLAQU. ;] What Is a Nixlet Nixie! Nixie! What is a Nixie? It is a piece of mail so incorrectly or i incompletely addressed, or so improperly t prepared that it can not be delivered or j I returned without special treatment and ' It goes to The post office hospital for a postal j operation. -It differs from a dead letter in that a dead letter, parcel, or circular j can neither be delivered nor returned, j and goes to the post office morgue for , 1 burial. ' Believe it or not. A celebrated French '-actress, Mme. Suzanne Despres, has re fused an offer, of the Legion of Honor, because, ,as she states, it is her desire to live het life 'With as little publicity ahd limelight, as possible. 1 . —j: • . - 1 —«_■. l " CONCORD Theatre Today Only caidlw(][QdmiJhxkfw Produced by Tilford Cinema , Corporation Story by John Lynch An ultra-modern society I girl and a man who had old | fashioned ideas about wom ! en. | Could the love of these 1 two last? t Would he believe her in nocent of the escapades in J which ,she had indulged in her quest’for excitement? Here's a ‘different” love story laid' in the pleasure ground of the rich! Also Campbell Sisters Afternoon and Night Special Organ Music by Wm, Klassette It Ask at our toilet goods counter for “The Quest of the Beautiful,” a booklet which describes ail of the Venetian Preparations and tells how to apply the Muscle Strapping Treatments. Gibson Drugstore 000000000<XX>000<Wionnftt*yyyx*ra^ QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT j THE PRICE OF CHEAPER j * Merchandise REMOVAL SALE That is what you can get at our Now at its best in Value-Giving COME TODAY WILL j PAY YOU , Browns-Cannon Co. SOUTH UNION STREET j Same Old Stand June Is the Time For Graduation Now Is the Time to Select Your Grad uation Slippers j RUTH-KESLER SHOE STORE Smartest Styles Lowest Prices J Some Knock Out Bargains in Canned Goods No. 3 Cans Sunnical Syrup Peaches 20c No. 3 Cans Black Berries |j No. 3 Cans Silver Floss Kraut ; ~~ 15c H No. 3 Cans Lye Hominy ~ 10c No. 3 Cans Pie Peaches 15c j No. 2 Cans Pitted Red Cherries ; 20c No. 3 Cans String Beans ~ Poultry Market Lower but firm. We will pay 17 l-2c per pouud H fqc Hens, and from 30 to 40c per pound for friers this week H C. H. BARRIER & CO. UO-91S W. Depot Street. DELCO LIGHT 1 Light Plants and Batteries f Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter- 3 ;■ nating current and Washing for direct or alter- 8 R. H. OWEN, Agent f ; *•“»» •* Concord, M. C 9 PAGE THREE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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May 21, 1925, edition 1
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