Monday, June 15, 1925 M«jr We Expect You /) • . - / _ Don't Overlook Our 79c June 19th to July 4th. and Dollar Table of Silks STEPS AHEAD At the Height of the Season Comes Good News for You If confidence begets confidence, and judgment—sound judgment—is the bulwark of successful business manipulation, here is a move we think you will appreciate: / Instead of announcing and advertising our Annual July Clearance Sale to begin in July, we will step ahead and announce the begnning of this event to begin Tuesday, June 16th. Right in the heart of the Spring Shopping Season you are accorded an opportunity to satisfy your Summer Apparel wants at prices that do not 'prevail until the season is over. Our stocks are ample and complete. They will not remain so at the prices we quote. We ask that you “step ahead” and take advantage'now of the many attractive values that prevail at Robinson’s. Robinson’s Are Out- These Well Known Brands of Silk l standing at Regular Prices- Hose Are Robinson’jßetter Values Exceptional NOW All Fresh New Stock After Sale Sale As . c . Price 4 Price After Sale ~Sale 18-Inch Oyster Linetr 4." c nce Price |:K §££££? 4 VS 'B2 Quaker Chi«°„H° S ., 4 pair , ":. £U9 <t fit Toriv, r JJ-Pv yuaker Chiffon Hose, the pair $1.20 lich |l;i $1.25 PmTlrLh Linen Sutin| ; 'Sc $3-5 ° Solepr^fpure 1 • t w h Pair ■ $1 , 5 s *. -~-g : r— “ * ■ * ■— 300 Dresses in 3 Groups Priced ! ,i, $8.50—513.50-$ 19.75 ™ -. Group Includes All Group includes AIH ' < Group includes All f SXvSQ Dresses that sold for $1 1.50 Dresses in Our Stock M 0.75 Dresses in Our Stock I £ $12.50 to $15.00 S tos3s. r 00 1 ]\ ;q -qq. : ..q —i The High Quality and Standard . ; ’ ‘ Dollar Silk Sale Brands of Our Cotton Goods A W#»1I K'nrkwrr. ' An Interesting! Tabl<i of All Kinds of Silks in Plain, iAIC. rrcit rvilUWll , Novelties and Prints, including values up to $3.00 a yardl After Sale Sale ' / < .. . '■ , V Price Price " 11 $.59 and Buty Chine / 39c •*, k $.59 Jersey Weave U-wear material 39c - - $1.25 Spart English Broadcloth 79c $ .39 . Toile DuNord Kalburnie and Utility Dpol I * Giggham and Zephyr IVCdI aCeS $ .50 Yearßound Everfast, and Indian Head Suiting 39c 25 per cent, dff on our Entire Stock of Genuine Hand $ .59 Dumari Fast Color Prints 39c ?: )* Made Irish Filet ant} Picot Laces Butterfield Fast Color Prints 39c 25 F®*R CENT OFF $ .59 Genuine Peter Pan Zephyr 45c * eW£ltt!!S£? 45c A Special I„, o, Geuuiue Hand Made Irish Lace gg Fine Colored Pajama Checks 21c and Insertlo «-' To clos e, per yard L. I ' . r They All Say The Prettiest Voiles I please bear in mind these facts: Have Ever Seen Unbroken Stock That we do not handle special sale, seconds or sub of Fashion’s Newest Prints sta rt r f m T h iT di ? ; . That we hold only two real sales annually; After Sale Sale That our prices are really reduced for clearance—cost Price Price and selling are not considered during this annual 50c and 65c Lingerie Material 39c eve 2»» t ,’ 59c Printed Crepe • 35c 1 hat we are J us t as interested in your being pleased 79c Fast-color British Broadcloth 50c and P r ?P er, y served during this event as we are at all 59c 44-inch Fast Color Plain Voile 45c oth l r . s . ’ .... 85c Fancy Voiles 59c , ** ,s our dominant aspiration to beget your con 50c Fancy Voiles 35c fidence and to be an institution of service as well as Lingerie Crepes . 25c economy. Fashionable New Weaves in Sum- Incomparable Prices on Our Entire mer Flannels Priced Less Than Stock of Quality Silks New York Cost Price Sale P s r £ After Sale „ s a i e $1.75 AH Silk Radium $1.25, Price ’ Price $1.50 Crepe de Chine $1.15 54 ands6-inch Kasha, value $4.65, per yard $3.25 $2.00 Crepe de Chine $1.59 $1.65 Sport Summer Flannels, a yard - SI.OO , $ 3 - 00 Crepe de Chine $2.45 $4.00 Imported French Flannels $2.95 $3.00 Satin Back Canton $2.45 $5.00 Charmeen, 54 inches wide, a yard $3.75 $2- 75 Flat Crepe $2.35 $7.85 Bordered 1 1-2 Pat. Summer Flannel, pat $5 50 £ 7 - 50 54-inch Bordered Crepe $5.50 .75 Shirt and,Sport Flannel, a yard ' 45 $3- 75 40-inch Bordered Crepe $2.65 * $1.65 Baronet Sport Satin slls Porto Rican Hand Made Voiles, Linens and fj™ CrCpe 79c Broadcloth Dresses ?1 '° 0 ° r bruited Crepes ( .75 f White and Colors, $5.00 .95 Pnnted Mary Dear Silks 76c_ The items enumerated above are picked here and there and are evidence of what you may expect in all departments. May we expect you during this event beginning Tuesday, June 16th, to July 4th? THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE j In and About the City [tax listers finish THEIR WORK FOR YEAR I Persons Desiring to List Taxes Now Must Make Returns to Register of Deeds Elliott. Tax listers of the county finished their year’s work Saturday and in the future persons desiring to make returns must | give them to Register of Deeds Elliott. . “Tax returns should have been made during May, but we continued the work until Saturday for the convenience of the public,” said J. W. B. Long, tax super visor of the county, this morning, “but we are finished now. Those persons who have failed to make their returns must give them to the register of deeds.” Mr. Long and a corps of assistants are preparing the tax books now and this work will be continued as the va rious tax listers turn in their books. Two books have already been completed. The Burial of Henry Wade Ivey. D. E. A. has in the last issue of the Stanly News-Herald the following trib ute to the late Wade Ivey, who was bur ied in New Ismdon last week: All that was mortal of Henry Wade Ivey, was placed securely in a grave Mon day afternoon and covered with a pro fusion of the most beautiful flowers that could bloom beneath the canopy of Heav en, and witnessed by scores of friends from different points of North Carolina and Virginia. All that devoted family and fond friends could do for Wade was of no avail, and as the church bells rang Sunday morning calling us to the house of worship, the bells of Heaven rang to summon his brave spirit to the eternal resting place. There is no doubt but that he is with God. His last hours were peaceful and he told his sisters in the last minutes of his life that he was not afraid to d’v, and breathed his last with out a tremor. For the lost few months he realized that he Could not live long, and wanted every ; business transaction satisfactorily adjusted, and be even with everything in a material way. His mother had been with him constantly for a long time, and had untiringly done everything that a mother's love prompted, the brothers and sisters were untiring in their devotion to him, he was deveoted to home and loved ones, and is the first of the family to be taken. The chain is broken, the courage ous golden link is gone. He did not die in war, but died from the effects, and has fought bravely all this time to overcome the cause. A prayer of condolence to bereaved ones, an undying reverence and love to the memory of Hen ry Wade Ivey, who as a boy was pleas ant and kind, as a young man, honorable and clean in character, and respected by young and old; : as a soldier, loynl and' valiant, even unto death, as a son to mother, devotion and obedience and love, ns a brother, the best one ever. Marjorie Daw at Concord Theatre Today. The screen success of Marjorie Daw, one of the principals in James Young’s First National production of “Wander ing Dnughtens” to be seen at the Concord Theater today cgn truly be said to be the result of keen intelligence and sheer histrionic ability for she does not possess any “cute tricks,” according to easting directors and producers. Marjorie Daw is very much a serious minded girl whoe poignant tenderness bespeaks hidden depths and her simplic ity and unaffectedness make her one of, the most popular of our younger screen set. Though she could not be imagined as an elaborately dressed and frilled so ciety bud or the girl who would ruin her young screen lover’s career or drive him to the depths of despair by her ex* travagence, Marjorie possesses, as James Young expresses it, that sweet bashful ness and confidence that would endear her to the most critical audience.” Attracting the attention and admira tion of Geraldine Farrar, Marjorie Daw obtained small parts in “Joan the Wom an” and a number of other screen-pro ductions at the Lasky studious while the opera star was appearing in productions there and later, so marked was her talent even in unimportant roles that various producers vied for her services. Rev. Dr. R. G. Miller Resigns. Charlotte Observer. A call to succeed Dr. R. G. Miller as pastor of Sardis A. R. P. Church in Mecklenburg county has been extended to Rev. W. P. Grier, of Clover, S. C. Mr. Grier is brother of Dr. R. C. Grier, of Ersksine College, and son of the late Professor Paul L. Grier, of that institution. He was reared at Due West, S. C., and has been pastor of the Clover Church for eight or ten years, his only pastorate. He is a young man, 30 to 35 years old. Dr. Miller resigned his charge at Sar dis a few weeks ago after serving ns pastor 38 years, succeeding the late Rev. John Hunter there. He has been preach ing for about fifty years, being pastor of the A. R. P. Church at New Hope, S. C., before going to Sardis Church. Meeting of Georgeville Community Club. An interesting program featured the meeting of the Georgeville Community Club Saturday night before a large au dience. Three short plays were pre sented and musical numbers were ren dered by Mrs. Paris Kidd and Prof. J. B. Robertson. It was decided at the meeting to pur chase a piano for the school house, the club to pay for thg instrument. The club has taken keen interest in the work of the school and only recently has completed many improvements to the school grounds. Methodist to Build New Broadway Temple. The new Brodway Temple to be erect ed by Dr. Christian F. Reisner and the . Chelsea Methodist Episcopal Church in the Borough of Manhattan, city of Newt York, will be a cathedral, hotel, apart,-1 ment house and many stores under one < root It will cost $4,000,000, of which j only $750,000 remains to be raised, j Over the temple proper will be apart ‘ ments. In the great tower there will be 644 rooms and public offices that will .bring in annual rental of $402,290. The | wings will contain housekeeping apart ments. for 500 people, renting at $166,- 290 a year. The entire income from rentals, it is estimated, will be $596,000 a year, which will more than support the church and pay the taxes and the interest on the bonds. Being a drug store clerk is dangerous. Dry agents get you. 50-54 South Union Street Voile Frocks Are Cool! Made in the Smartest Modes «Keep cool! And look well 1 These are ac complished when you wear a voile dress* The frocks we are showing are made in winsome styles and they are trimmed with lace, plaits, sashes, ajid other suitable variations. You Will Find Our Pricu Moat Advantageous! These dresses are in size? and styles for wom en and misses. Priced at, P Hard-Boiled, This Goodyear Heavy Duty Cord How would you like to have a tire that couldn’t be licked? ! Drive it hard—give it the bad news—run it anwhere short i of a nail plant or a glass works. Easy now! Don’t crowd. We’s got plenty for you. The new Goodyear Heavy Duty Cord for passenger cars. [ Made with extra plies of SUPERTWIST—extra elastic ; and extra strong—armored with circumferential sidewall ! ribs—powered with the famous All-Weather Tread. | Costs what? Let us give you the good news—confidential. j Yorke&WadsworthCo. THE BIG HARDWARE STORE \ Phone 30 Union and Church St. Phone 30 RUTH-KESLER’S Semi-Annual Shoe Sale Is Now Going on RUTH-KESLER SHOE STORE Smartest Styles Lowest Prices —1 • —■■ ■ >■?"" "'f, i"' 1 i-.iijjui.iL. . 1 USE TIMES AMD TRIBUNE PENNY ADS.-IT PAYS PAGE THREE

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