Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / June 23, 1925, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAGE EIGHT OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO4 NORTH CAROLINA | SEASHORE EXCURSION I Norfolk aifjd Virginia Beach, Va. Southern Railway System ' THURSDAY. JUNE 25th, 1925. ! THREE WHOLE DAYS AND TWO NIGHTS IN NORFOLK. I I Round trip fare from Concord :To Norfolk $7.50; to Virginia Beach SB.OO i ]i \ Special train leaves Concord i :35 I*. M. June 25, 1025. ] 1 1 1 Arrives Norfolk 8:15 A. M. June 30th. i 'l 1 Tickets on sale June 25th only, limited good to return on all regular 1 [ jl trains up to and including train No. 3 leaving Norfolk 0:10 P. M., ]l 1 1 ' Tickets from Main Line points will be honored only on Special Train. 1 1 1 i l , Tickets from branch line point* will be honored on regular trains to ]i iji junction points, connecting with special train. Jll Pullman sleeping car and day coaches. i i Fine opportunity to spend the week-end at Virginia Beach, Ocean View ( 1 \ | Good surf bathing, boat excursions and sightseeing trips. J l l i[ i No stop-overs and no baggage will be checked. i [ > ] ; Make your sleeping car reservations early. * f V i For further information call on any Southern Railway agent or address: Ji| ' V M: E. WOODY, Ticket Agent R. H. GRAHAM. D. P A., ]! j i Concord, N. C. Charlotte, N. C. <[i ooooooooooooooooooooooooooocooooooooooooooooooooooooo' goooooooocooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo Don’t Be Confused About Tires ijj I ; With scores of different brands of tires on the market, !| i ! each looking pretty much like the others—with eyeryone X ] ! claiming the best—with this and that “special, offer”—it’s jl; | no wonder car owners are confused. ! ' But the safe, .sane, sensibly time-saving thing to do is to X I I buy a good tire at the rprice from a good, dependable X ] | dealer. ? 2 i i Isn’t that the way you buy nearly everything else? !j! | \ Ask our price on Goodyears in your size. ji| | YorkefeWadsworthCo. [ Our Glassware Department | Is Complete I Watch Our Windows For Low Prices | | CHARLES STORES CO., Inc. I j | 34 South Union St., Concord N. C. a OOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOOu § Jpr ■ — 4 MOOOOtstioooootMsoeooooexitMmnooaoeacinct^^ BETTER CLEANING RESULTS Are obtained when your garments are thoroughly dust- , j i ed before; Cleaned or pressed. We electrically dust all suits whether they be Dry Cleaned or just sent in for pressing - __ 8 9 o Bpy Cleaning Department X A 7 » r o THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE ■■ ~ ■ ~ The Concord Dafly.Tribune j TIME OF CLOSING OF MAILS !' The time of the dosing of mails at the i Concord postoffice is as follows: Northbound. 136—11:00 P. M. i 36—10:00 A. M. 34 4 :10 I*. M. 38— 8:30 P. M. 30—11.00 P. M. [ Southbound, i 30— 0:30 A. M. 45 3 :30 P. M. 135 8:00 P. M. 29—11:00 P. M. LOCAL MENTION j . -| Mrs. B. E. Harris is confined to her home on North Union street on account i of illness. i There is no change reported in the \ condition of Parker Hartsell. who is se- ’ , riously ill at his home in i No. 10 town i ship. | On Monday, July 6, 1025, at 11 o’clock | a. m. the sheriff will sell at the court i house door to the highest bidder for cash 1 all real estate on which the taxes for I | 1024 have not been paid. [ The, regular weekly meeting of the Ro i tary Club will be held tomorrow at | 12:30 o’clock. H. W. Blanks.’chairman i of the boys’ work committee, wHI have | i charge of the program. County Highway forces are now engag ed in building roads in the Watts’ Cross ( Roads section. The old Salisbury high-, I way is now being reconstructed from the 1 Cross roads to the Rowan county line, i > The Carolina Motor Club issued 133 j ! licenses here Monday and took in a total > in fees of SIBB2 for the day. It is [ thought that the rush will continue until! | after the first of July. i The City B. Y. P. U. will 01(8*1 to- I night at 8 o’clock at the First Baptist [ church. An election of officers will take ( place at this time. Refreshments will be j served. • Mrs. C. M. Petrea died this morning at [. 1:30 o'clock at her home on Bethpnge i roml near Kannapolis. Funeral ser -1 vices will be held tomorrow morning at | 10:30 o'clock at Bethpage Church. No , i other particulars could be lfarned. | C. IV. Byrd and R. P. Gibson returned i Monday night from Wilmington, where i they spent the week-end with Mrs. Byrd j and Mrs. Gibson, who will remain at the i i beach fur several days. They made the j 1 trip in Mr. Byrd's car. 1 The traffic sign at the square became: ’ jammed in some manner this morning and i would operate only after an electrician | had worked on it. The sign was not i badly out of order, however, and was in i operation again a few minutes after the i electrician started his work. 1 "Nothing new to report.” was the re | ply received at i>oliee headquarters this l morning when officers were asked about | business in .their line. "No session of [ the police court was held Monday after i noon.” an officer stated, “and nothing has | developed of more than passing interest.” , People in No. !) township are delight- \ i ed now that work lias begun on St. Mar- 1 ' tin's hill, which for years has been a ! bugbear to travelers in that section, i 1 Tile hill, which is one of the worst in 1 | the county, is being out down so that it ] l will be only a gradual grade. i | Washington cut Philadelphia’s lead in 1 the American League Monday by de- } . fcating Cleveland while St. Louis was i ’ winning from Philadelphia. At the same ] | time Chicago defeated New York and ] I Detroit defeated Boston. In the Na- i tional League Chicago defeated Cineiu- j nati and Pittsurgh defeated St. Louis. | , In an effort to control foot traffic at ! j the intersection of Union. Means and 1 j Barbriek streets, a pedestrian's path has [ I been designated by white lines. "If per- i | sons will follow this route instead of 1 | cutting across this intersection in all di ) reetions, they will be safer and traffic i > will move more swiftly and more easily,’’ j a traffic officer of the city states. I The - Hunkin-Conkey Co., which has | the contract for the new hotel building ) here, plans to transfer a number of work- I men to Concord from Greenville, S. C., J next Monday. These men have been > engaged on the Poinsett Hotel in Green i ville for the past eleven months. The | Poinsett is without doubt one of the I handsomest and finest hotels in the South. j The sewer line for the new hotel build ing will be laid fn Union street at once, - the work of cutting the asphalt on the street preparatory to digging the sewer ditch, having been started this morning. The line has been laid on West Depot and the ditch has been dug on East Depot street. • The on Union street will connect the, lines on East and West Depot streets. Practically all of the local men who served with Battery F during the World War plan to go to Mooresville on Thurs day of this week for a reunion. The battery had its headquarters in Moores ville when it was organized and for that reason the reunion will be held m that city. Plans are being made to get every member of the battery in the Iredell coun ty town for the reunion. Monday was probably the hottest day of many years in Concord, according to a number of persons who have expressed . their opinion of the heat during the day. There are other persons, however, who ( think it was just as hot or hotter Sun day. Signs of rain have been in evi dence throughout the day, as it has been cloudy since'fl o’clock this morning. Rain is badly needede throughout the county , now. We have been requested to state that i the name of J. R. Dorton was included | ! >n the delinqnent tax list by mistake. :Two returns for Mr. Dorton were made out in some manner and although he paid 1 his taxes some time ago his name was in cluded because of the double return. “Mr. : SpH v^ y SAYS The clothes that make the wdtaen are the clothes that break the men. Cost of a chicken dinner depends on how many', chickens you invite. There is no excuse for a bachelor's . being a good liar. Chairs last longer if' tacks are placed ; upright in the seat. The good or bad thing about being , in love is you can’t drink. 1 1 A man Usually gets what he deserves in this world. That’s the trouble with ', the world. I Blessed are the bootleggers for they have inherited a large part of this earth. Wasn’t it about this time of year when Rip Van Winkle we’nf to sleep and slept twenty years? 1 The differences which cause most trou ble are indifference*. . I All of the cures for sunburn are very good but none of them seem to be good enough. . It's a wrong road that has no turning back. j The skeleton in the average closet is in she bank book instead. A man who married one of the super sex last June thinks she is the supper sex now. ; Iljove thy neighbor, but be not too friendly with borrowing his goods. These are the days the boss gets mad when he finds things went along nicely , while he- was away fishing, i Here and there you hear of a stream being dragged for some one who didn’t I think it was deep. I (Copyright, 11125, NEA Service, Inc.) I ' ‘ Eight Billion Ibdlxrs a Year on Auto mobiles. The American people are now spend ! ing about $8,000,000,000 a year on the purchase and maintenance of automo biles. Os this amount $2,000,000,000 goes for pew machines, and the remain ing $6,000,000,000 for accessories, gaso | line, tires, repairs, and garage charges. I There are now in use in the United States 17,500.00 passenger cars and trucks, or one to every seven persons in the country. t These facts are contained in a- recent I report just made public by the American committee on highway transport. The 'report, asserting that the wealth and re sources of the country have increased by billions of 'dollars by reason of the mo ) tor car. brands the automobile and eoon lomie necessity. The report continues: j "During the period of the advance of the motor ctfr in America savings, banks ' deposits have nearly doubled, individual i W. tt. W. NOTICE. Regular meeting of Elm Camp No. 16 W. O. W. Tuesday evening at 8:00 o’clock in the Moose Lodge Room. Every member is urged to be present. S. A. WEDDINGTON, C. C. R. f. LITAKER. Clerk. oooooooboooooooooooooooooo Let Your ijj Next Battery "' ;; jjj Be An | EXIDE | iji Use Only the ||! Best Our New Mechanically Refriger ated Autopolar Fountain keeps ice cream in the most per fect condition. W ith this new au tomatic refrigerating device, it is 'mark**!! IS',™ ! thj,, i nsureß a u j ce bn 11k de|K>*it* have tripled, and life in -u ranee in force ha* increased two and a half time*. ..The ; o{ motor transportation also has revolutionized life on the farms, each year seeing many more j cars and trucks in the country.” i < — - ■ i ; Bantam Rooster Becomes a “Mother!” i | Lexington Dispatch. 1 Some fine chicks were hatched out this i morning after a bantam rooster belong- j ling to Mrs. Ernest Smith had sat upon j 1 tl'f eggs for the required period of time { and according to news from the chicken j * lot just before press time there is no J I prouder "mother” in Lexington. I It may have been the'heat, or it may J ! have been the doings at Dayton, Tenn., jj 5 1 that t aused the little rooster to act that' ( I way, but several weeks ago he begun to J 5 1 sit around on bricks. When ho per- ( 1 j sisted, eggs were substituted and he stuck ( Jto the job until the reward came this J 'j (notning. i • > I‘ake Mr. Bryan ! I’age Mr. Darrow! ( > i. J. < 1 ! New School Code Drawn For Kentucky j i Complete recodification of the school ( : laws of Kentucky ,is • contemplated', for j the need of it is recognized throughout j r the rftate. The Kentucky Educational < 1 Association took up the matter in 102* j and appointee! a committee of five per- 4 1 sons to prepare a code for the eonsid- J eration of the legislature at the session J 5 of 102(5. The committee was aided by a j representative of the Department of the j Interior. Bureau of Education, and the J ; code they propose has reeetnly been com- j pleted- A strong effort will be made to j 1 procure its adoption. 1 SOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 1 I Japanese Lanterns Will make your lawn party | \ j a hundred per cent, more at- ] j tractive. We have them in iji J many designs and sizes from ! ! ] 10c to 715 c each. Also a fine selection of |j; place cards, tally cards, fav- !ji 1 ors, prizes and everything ] you need for \ a successful 1 1 ; j lawn, porch or bridge party, j 1 Musette,im j XSOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCXJOOOOOO 1 3 FREE! !j! j j Squibb** Service Package free 1 with every SO' cent purchase of Ij, i]i fjqttibbs Goods. 1 Squibbs service pnekage contains 11 a tube of cold cream, tube dental \j 1 11 cream, talcum, analgesic balm, Ep- V 1j som salts and sodium b : carbonate. \I, 1 11 All of this is in a nice box. The 11 111 very thing to carry on your vaea- |l| 1 1J Hon trip. 1j 1 | Clines Pharmacy ;!; Phone 333 !j| Country Cured Hams Kingans Cured Meats We have perhaps the finest assortment of Choice Lean Country Hams that we have had for the whole season. We sell them whole, small and medium sizes. Then we have the large size for slicing. A , big lot—so a slice or two for everybody now. They won’t last long. Kingans cured Hams, Breakfast BaCon, I Picnic Hams —a full lihe fresh each week. For good cured meats we always have it, if H’s to be had. Cline & Moose W« Deliver Quick Everywhere. Add the Comforts of PLUMBING to Your Home 1 • Modern )pi»unbing will do as | much of- more than any other one : thing toward making your home j I Cash on Deliv- § when the suit ' not exactly the same sort . j||| of fit you contracted am * J |j 1 that one reason we do not » i|l deal in the same grade of clothing is that you and we are < ! X living in the same city and we don’t want to see you in it* |!| Court for starting a free-for-all. ’ |'j. Schlo'ss Clothes made to make good and not to make ' > 1 1 1 you good and mad! $25.00 and up i ' HOOVER’S, Inc. j ; “THE YOUNG MAN’S STORE” | iM»OOOOOOOCX)OOOftftryvvvv^otx>«XKKy>OOfK>OOtK>fVM>fttW>t > *y>fWOv ;[ Peppy gas. Motor! jWB miles mean full measure gas. Clean 11 back to the gas we sell. It brings! | *7 1~~ ~ • tlie chirpy cars and smiling faces of j 1 * Es k~ bid patrons back. The first time YOU 11 [ ,ul * . U P antl fIH-up will not be the 11 s HOWARD’S FILLING STATION j ! H m * 1 “Service With a Mlltf* • PHONB ** QO<>°OOOOOOOOOOOOC)OOOCXXXX)UOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOeOc > oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooGoocxxioobooooooooo I ICE, COAL and SERVICE A. B. POUNDS I 111 PHdtffi &4 ' A I MEMORIAL : l to the Valor _ ■ |||| of the Soldier of the South This Is the Message on the New Stone Mountain Memorial Half-Dollar * We have received a quantity of these coins, put out un der Congressional authority. They are offered to the pub lic at One Dollar each—the fifty-cent premium will ga to the Stone Mountain Confederate Monumental Association to help carry out the South’s great Memorial. Robert E. Lee and ‘Stonewall” Jackson appear on one side. On the other is the great American eagle, high on a mountain crag. The coin is an artistic triumph. . You will want one or more of these new Half-Dollars. They are ready for you here. ' CABARRUS SAVINGS RANK, Capital $400,000.00 Resources Over $3,000,000.00 ‘ ""another"new one '""""“V Note the simplicity. One Iv\ strap that fits so perfect- Vnw/ /!/ I ly you’ll be glad to own a / A pair of these. // / jtj /1 Done in both patent 11 I and Satin. Newest toe > stvlish heel. Prices— [ JJ $7.00 | IVEY’S THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES” 11111 ,". 1 CONCORD PRODtCB MARKET. (Corrected weekly by Gllne A Mooee) Ttv 1 CL* . Figures named represent price* paid L FCSfI olllpniCnt for produce on the market: / r Eggs " "," S ' Corn - SI.BB Street poutoea I.HO Real Hams, per pound 30c M Good Breakfast Bacon ___ 30c lb. Good Meats at> Good prices. _ZI7- Cabarrus Cash Gro- - eery Company I Tuesday, June 23, 1925 I
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 23, 1925, edition 1
8
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