TKurs3ay, July 30,1925 SOCIALE PERSONAL :* Rendleman-Ayres. Salisbury Post, 29th. Telegrams received this morning from Mr. and Mrs. John L. Rendleman bring the news that they were married last night in Concord by the Rev. L. A. Thomas, and that they will be at home ' in about a week. On Saturday Mrs. Rendleman. who was then Miss Marie Ayres, went to Can ton, N. C., to visit a college friend, Mrs. Hartshore. and it was while 1 1here that she and Sir. Rendleman de cided to;be married at once. They went to Porest City ini search of Df? W. R. Ware whom they found to be away from home. Then they went to Concord and were married by the Rev- L. A. Thomas, of the Lutheran Church. Mrs. Rendleman is the oldest daughter cf Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Ayres, of West Fisher street, a decided brunette in col oring and one of Salisbury’s most strik ingly beautiful and vivacious young wom en. She is universally popular. Re ceiving her education in the Salisbury schools and at N. C. C. W„ Greensboro, Che reftirned to Salisbury and then taught for the past two years in the Gold Hill schools. She is interested in athletic*, in music and art. Mr. Rendleman is the second son of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Rendleman. of North Fulton street. He is an alumnus of Roanoke College. Lenoir College and the University of North Carolina law school. For the past three years he has practiced law with his father and brotV ' er, the firm of Rendleman and Rendle man, attorneys, being well known in the city and throughout the state. Mr. Ren dleman is a most likable young man, numbering ’ his friends by his acquain tances. On returning to the city Mr. and " Mrs. Rendleman will occupy an apart ment at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Fountain on West Kerr Street until they build their own home. i • Daughter Born. to Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Harri-1 sou, Juljr'gSth. a daughter. MUUngport Glee Chib. The “Glee Club’* of Millingport High School, under the direction of Miss Mabel Denning, of Albemarle, will render n program Saturday night, August Ist. be ginning at 8 o'clock, in the school audi torium dt Milliugport. The program will consist of a Spanish dance, monologues, dialogues, drills, choruses, and plenty of string music. The club cordially invited the public to at tend. There wijl be no admission fee. Son Born to Dr. and Mrs. Wolff. Announcement has been received in the city of the birth of a son. George Miles, to I)r. and Mrs. C. O. Wolff, of Haynesville, La., on July 16th. Dr. Wolff is the son of Mr. and Mre. S. A. Wolff of this city. Thursday Bridge Club Meeting Post- Q ported. The Thursday Bridge Club, which was to have met this week at the home of M rs. Parks Lafferty in the country, has been postponed until next week. The Pacific Christian Advocate. on« of the ablesf of the Method’st papers bearing the name, ridicules the prospectus of a firm offering speeches and discourses on any subject, while it ruefully refers to the “canned" editorials it is compelled to use under the present system of "pat ent insides" to which the board-controlled Advocates must submit.—Dearborn Inde pendent. CATARRH of nose or throat is made more endurable, some* timesgreatl y benefited by applying Vicks up nos trils.'Also melt some and inhale the vapors. VICKS W VapOßub Oner 17 Million Jan Und Yearb ■ [(■ ifc _ ■I jj' %>sfKci II SoMBr • 8 ;!♦) Mu i • .>•* f vj IE BELL-HARMS FUN. If EKAL PARLOR 11 JfeV Phone MO || Night Phone* MO-158L iiiMMMMMM , : . Wmm. . ti' , • x,. .. • fifltft . ■■ “ Mrs. C. D. McDonald left this' morn ing for Black Mountain, where she will 1 spend a week or ten days. . m • • s t Mrs. W. C. J. Caton has returned . from a week's visit at Cherryville and > MeAdenville. • . • • , Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Furr and Mrs. . Wade Kluttz returned last night from a ten dnyß’ trip to Washington, D. C. • • * Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Boyd and daugh ter, Margaret, Misses Sara and Margaret Parnell and Lester Murr, of Charlotte, left this morning for Black Mountain. ■ • • Sister May Haltiwanger, of the Moth -1 er House, .Baltimore, is visiting in the , city at the heme of Mr. and Mrs. V. L. Norman on Tribune Street. • * * Harold Dry is spending the week on vacatio nat Wrightsville Beach. ■ • • Miss Ruth Dry, who has been an instructor at the University summer school at Chapel Hill, has returned to her home on South Union street. Miss Dry wifi teach in the local high school next winter. • • • Hug’ll Propst. of Pamplico, S. C., is visiting in the city for several days. • • « Miss Hazel Gardner has returned home from Mt. Pleasant where she was the guest of Miss Rebekah Moose. * * • Rev. and Mrs. L. A Thomas and chil dren, Grace, Luther and Carl, are spend ing the day in Granite Quarry at the Brown reunion, given for Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Brown and Rev. D. D. Brown. :• • > Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Correll and Dr. SjHl Mrs. H. C. Herring are spending the day in Charlotte. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Riddick and three children, of Gatesville, The visiting Mrs. D. G. Caldwell. Patient Old China. New York Daily Mirror. The Chinese are a patient nation. On Sunday last the Chinese government officially strangled to death a Russian bandit named Korniloff. He had de served killing, according to man's law. by his banditry, and by the fact that when he was first tried tie killed several in his escape from court. The interesting thing is that Korni loff is the first white man ever officially put to death by the Chinese government. When you consider all the deviltry of which white men of different kinds have been guilty in Chinese ports, and else where in China, and when you consider the short shrift that many Chrinese have received at the hands of the white men in the white men's countries, you wonder at Chinese patience. Your Car, a Maefadden publication, in its August number has an interesting a: tide on driving by Alfred Loom if. “Things You Do That Make the Cops Chase You.” showing that it isn’t al ways speed—recklessness is what the motorcycle man is watching for. “Don't Re a Tire Gambler" gives some good ad vice on what constitutes tire economy, while "Tlie Ghost Tn the Car" is the tale of a cab and the jinx that pursued it. Eskimo girls and women have taken to bobbing their hair, according to a traveler recently returned from the far North. Add the Comforts of PLUMBING to Your Home Modern plumbing will do as much or more than any other one thing toward making your home a comfortable and convenient place in which to live. It costs you nothing to get our cost es timate. „ ~ Concord Plumbing Company North Kerr Street PhoM«V« To prevent freckles Elizabeth Arden has created an > exquisite finishing lotion, i VENETIAN LILLE LOTION, ( to be used under powder. > Antiseptic', and astringent, < , mouths and refiws the skin, leaves a silky finish, flattering ' • fat day or evening. Prevents , windbum, sunburn and Reckling. I 1 White, Cream, NatunUe, Special < , Rachel, SpaniA Rachel, Gem $1 ja $L5a j Gibson Drug Store SAFETY BUTTONS ARE OFFERED TO CHILDREN They Will Be Given Children Who Sign Pledge to Observe 10 Safety Rules— Distribute Cards. ,Greensboro News. A definite drive to reduce accidents will begin in Greensboro this morning. . according to C. T. Matthews, director of j the accident prevention department of the Carolina Motor club, who has formulated 10 safety rules for children 1 and offered attractice accident preven i tion buttons to youngsters who will sign a pledge to observe the rules. Distribution of a card containing the . safety rules, a message to parents ask i gig their co-operation in the accident prevention campaign and the pledge to be signed by the children, will begin to - day on North Elm and Aeheboro streets, t The entire city will be covered during , the week. Questions and answers on the pledge card are: “What should you do before crossing ! a street? I should stop and look both • ways, and when it is snfe cross the street quickly. “Where is the proper place for you or anyone to cross the street? At the crossing where it is least dangerous. , “Whnt should you do. if standing in . the middle of the street, you should see , automobile or other vehicles -coming in , both directions? Stand perfectly still [ until they have passed. “Whnt danger is there in stealing a ride on an automobile or other vehicle? i There is danger of being injured either by falling off or being run over when I jump off. “In case a child or anyone is injured by qn automobile or other vehicle what is the first thing to do? Call help as quickly as possible. "If when playing on the street you see an automobile or other vehicle ap proaching what ought y&u do? I should get to a place of safety as quickly as possible. “When you are playing in the street what should you always keep in mind? That I have chosen a very dangerous place in which to play and that I must be on the constant lookout for auto mobiles and other vericles. “Why should you not play in streets frequently used by automobiles? Be cause it is too dangerous. "What, shpuld yon do when leaving a trolley ear to go to the right? I should look to see if any automobiles or other vehicles are coming toward me. “What should you do when leaving a trolley car to go to the left? I should not pass behind the trolley car until I can see for some distance on the left hand side of the road.” Buttons will be awarded children signing the pledge card and presenting it nt. the motor club office. 224 East Market street. Probably no branch of sport has ever furnished a parallel to the record made by Frank Kramer, the bicycle racer. Kramer competed for twenty-seven yearn, twenty-three years as a profes sional and four yers as an amatenr. He held the professional ehampiuoship of America eighteen times, the world’s championship once, in 1912. the only yer fagcope»*(Ufor the amateur ti tle two years. Our New Mechanically Refriger ated Autopolar Fountain keeps ice cream in the most per fect condition. With this new au tomatic refrigerating device, it is possible to hold the temperature to the zero mark if desired, and this insures all ice cream and drinks in the best of condition. PEARL DRUG CO On the Square Phone 22 PUTTING A MODERN TUB IN YOUR HOME means a distinct increase in home comfort and an improvement in family health. It does not mean any serious inconvenience or loss of time or a big expenditure of money if we do the work. Why tot see us about it? E. B. GRADY PLUMBING AND HEATING DEALER! Office mad Show Bomb 8* E. Corbin St. Office Phono UtW I THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE THE CENTENARY OF < v BUCKINGHAM PALACE The Beet Knofcn of OH the English Royal Residences. London, July 28.—This month wit nesses the centenary of Buckingham Palace, perhaps the best knows of all of England’s royal residences, although it can lay out little claim to the stately traditions that surround Windsor Castle or St. James Palace. Buckingham has only borne its palatial honors since 1825, when George IV. resolved to transform Buckingham House into a palace, and, under the somewhat fallacious pretext of repairs, contrived ta spend about 2,- 500,000 of the public money upon the transformation. The First Gentleman of Europe, as splendidly prodigal of bricks and mortar as he was of every thing else, entirely rebuilt “Queen’s House,” as Buckingham House was called alter it was settled an Queen Charlotte, and to it its - former name, but with the regal addition. The ground on which Buckingham Palace stands was once occupied by mul berry gardens originally laid out in fur therance of the scheme of .Tames, I to encourage the silk industry in England. The gardens must eventually have at tained to the same eminence as certain fashionable restaurants of the present day. Here Dryden ate tarts with Mme. Anne Reeve, and Evelyn mentions a par ty given by Lady Gerard, and adds: “It is now the only place about town for persons of the best quality. William IV. never liked Buckingham Palace and it was not until 1837, when Queen Victoria removed there from Ken sington Palace, that Buckingham became the official home of the sovereign. It was this circumstance which in spired "The Times.” possibly for the first and only time in its career, to a conundrum. “Why is Buckingham Pal ace the cheapest ever built?" asked the great and usually grave newspaper; and replied: “Because it was built for one sovereign and furnished for another.” At the beginning of its career as a royal residence, Buckingham Palace was by no means so -well organized as it is today. Division of labor, for instance, was carried to altogether too great ex tremes. It was the duty of the Lord Steward’s department to lay the fires, but they could only be' lit by the bqrd Chamberlain's department. Then dishes from the royal kitchens had to be car ried through endless corridors before they were served, so that they rarely arrived at table in perfect condition. Most startling of all, it seemed pos sible for any one to enter the palace. Shortly after Queen Victoria's marriage, a great sensntion was paused by a boy named Jones, who claimed to have gained access to the private apartments of the palace, and to have overheard conversa tions between the Queen and the Prince Consort. The most interesting event which took place in Buckingham Palace was the drinking of the first eup of tea ever made in England. This took place in 1666. when the place was still Bucking ham House. The Duke of Arlington, who then owned the mansion, bought a pound of tea for something like twenty dollars. ; Buckingham Palace May be regarded as a lucky home, for djpuig the hundred years it has been a royal residence only one member of the royal family has died there—King Edward VII. Queen Vic toria died at Osborne. Prince Albert at Windsor, and both Prince John and the Duke of Clarence at Sandbringham. During the last twenty years a num ber of alternations have been made to the palace. King Edward made changes which simplified the domestic arrange ments and ill 1913 King George had the whole of the front, which had become very weather worn, refared. In Malay, “twenty men will work u half a day to land six dollars worth of little fish.” Make Your Summer Free From Ice Worry,, Install Kelvinator electric refrigeration in your refrigerator and you can forget all about ice deliv ery this summer. Kelvinator will keep your refrigerator much colder ! and your foods much better and longer. When you go visiting it wifi stay cold while you are gone. Kelvinator requires no time or attention and is trouble free. It usually costs less to operate Kelvi nator than to buy ice. Phone or call for details. Yorke A Wadsworth Co. j : | Kelvinator The Oldest Domestic Electric Ref rlf er etion 1 . m I Hn.l I. ■ i iwaWH,-- TT" -TI.I i “iii.' "ii'i ■i *1 -' . . •! • - . , i ROBINSON’S SALE THIS ! MORNING IS SUCCESSFUL I Large Number of Women Visit the Store and Purchase Gowns at Reduced Prices. , i The sale of silk dresses at Robinson’s 1 this morning brought a large crowd of i women to the store in search of the bar ■ gains as advertised. For a time the store . was filled to overflowing with buyers. i Many expressions of approbation were , heard in regard to the quality of the i goods which were offered at this time. , Numerous women purchased dresses at : the sale price which was $7.05. The sale • is to continue for ten days. : Ernest Robinson, in speaking of the i sale, remarked that he was getting rid of ! all the dresses' at less than cost simply ■ because of the fact that he did not wish i to carry them over the winter. , LARGE LOVING CUP RECEIVED BY FIREMEN , Concord Department Receives Prize For Best Attendance at Asheville Meeting. An immense loving cup received by i the local fire department as the trophy for the best attendance is now on exhi bition in The Times-Tribune window. It is a beautiful cup, being over two : feet in height and mounted on a mahog any pedestal. This is the first year that the Concord Firemen have held this cup. Inscriped on the cup is the following legend: “Presented to Concord Fire Department For Largest Attendance 3Hth Annual Convention N. C. State Firemen's Assosciation. Asheville, X. C., 1!)25.” Dance Lovers Magazine in its August issue has a very timely article by Ned Wayburn, "How to Take Care of Your Feet,” in which the advisability of wear ing the right kind of shoe for your par ticular type of foot is stressed. Madame Eva Alberti explains how she is “Pop ularizing Pantomime.” It seems that nearly all great daiyeers are finished pantomimists and thei rart has been ac quired through constant study and much j introspection. Helen Macfadden tells j “How to Develop Hand-stands and Cart- ! wheels,” and our ever popular comedian, j Lew Fields, becomes serious and explains ! his views in “So This Is Dancing?” 1 If we had things to do over again, we should probabaly do them worse. MIIIrHELPS i SORE, fED FEET! Good-bye, sore feet, burning feet, ( swollen feet, sweaty feet, smelling i feet, tired feet. Good-bye corns, callouses, bunions J and raw spots. No more shoe tight- i ness, no more limping with pain or j drawing up your face in agony. , “Tiz’’ is magical, acts right off. i “Tiz” draws out all the poisonous | exudations which puff up the feet, i Use “Tiz” and forget your foot mis ery. Ah! how comfortable yonr feet feet Get a box of “Tiz” now at i any drug or department store. 1 Don’t suffer. Have good feet, glad ! fget, feet that never swell, never i hurt, never get tired. A year’s foot 1 comfort guaranteed for a few cents. | Test “Tiz” free. Send this coupon, i Ig Waller Utk.r Dadfe C«. r> 598 -Madison Ave. J 4 f©© x New York City T* 1 i ii MoilMeNMttpl*“TlZ” * ria * ||:i==:£EE| ! r oooooooooo6ooo*ooooooooooooooooooooo*ooo* . ; ' ‘ i ■ ■' -i ■ All Suits Reduced 25 to 50 Per Cent. Straw Hats at Half Price Including Panamas and Leghorns Browns-Cannon Co. I CANNON BUILDING | | SUGAR! SUGAR!**” IE Vour Supply Now; It Can’t Well Go Lower. 100 Lb. Bags $6.50; 25 Lb. Bags $1.75; 10 Lb. Bags 75c if We don’t sell it for lc under cost, but from 1-2 to le over cost. You jj. can get it from us any hour of the day any day of the week and any | week of the year. ‘ -« 1 ou ( l° n * have to v wear a dress or be a full grown man to buy our !§ sugar. ji judges, lawyers, doctors, preachers, laymen, farmers, chil §» dren, “niggers,” merchants and all other classes. e do not offer you some staple article \)f dry goods at 20 per cent, un tjj der cost to get you to patronize us. | e are . in the grocery business and solicit your patronage sol<sy on r the merits of our goods and service. 1 C. H. BARRIER & CO. 30000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 11 DELCO LIGHT 1 Light Plants and Batteries < Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter- | j nating current and Washing Machines for direct or alter- 1 i nating current. | R. H. GWEN, Agent Phone 68$ Concord, N. C. o 30000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 July Clearance of All Our White j / Slippers This July Clearance Sale is an event here meriting f r i study on the part of every woman. j A July Clearance Sale of this magniture needs no fur- if -1 tlier urging. | $2.95«54.95 I | RUTH-KESLER SHOE STORE j | Smartest Styles Lowest Prices JOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOodobocsoooboooooootXKW THAT STRAW OR PANAMA HAT Can be Cleaned and Reblocker to : | finish out the season if sent to us. \ M. R. POUNDS Dry Cleaning Department - 11 ■ 11 - * ■■■■■ Ji i J• - A.-’ z .. ’-jl . ..-SiLiraauj E*P*wd Wedding Invitations and An* nouneements on short notice at Times- Tribune Office. We represent one of the best engravers in the United States. Lnd Deeds and Mortgage TYust Deeds, , printed on best paper, 5 cents each, at 'Times- Tribune office. \ • ■' PAGE FIVE lip... il I . ■f.-t, I ,I^.l Women visitonj to the l’ope are not 1 permitted by the official regulations to wear any jewelry with the exception of - wAiding or ■ engagement rings. . The top rung of the ladder of life is : the most dangerous—but it affords tb» best view.

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