PAGE SIX Trip of County Bee Club * It is proposed that the members of the Cabarrus Coun- i * ety Bee Club, and others interested in beekeeping, attend, 1 »■ in a body, a meeting of the N. C. and S. C. Beekeepers As- Z sociation, at Charlotte, on Friday, September 11th, 1925. * Leaving Concord at 8:00 A. M. so as to get to Charlotte I by 9A. M. There will be addresses and demonstrations £ throughout the day. For full particulars see the Concord ’ Times and Tribune of September 7th. R. D. GOODMAN, Secretary-Treasurer. I Concord, N. C„ Sept. 2, 1925. I I WARNER BROS.’ CONCORD THEATRE LAST SHOWING TODAY OF !|| “CAPTAIN BLOOD” | WITH J. WARREN KERRIGAN TEAN PAIGE AND 8 1500 ACTORS —SAILORS AND BUCCANEERS S[ THE PRODUCTION THAT BLOCKED TRAFFIC Sj ON BROADWAY FOR MORE THAN A MONTH 8 HISTORICAL—THRILLING—LAVISH—STUPEN- 8 Lower Floor 40c Balcony.3oc . Children 15c C Original Music —Shows at 1 :30-—l—(i :30—9 QOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 I THE UNIVERSAL CAR l j The service on your car should be a source of continual X !ji satisfaction. If it is not, your dealer has failed to fulfill ]!| 1 1 his obligation to both you and the manufacturer of your i| ]! car. Such failures, though apparently of minor import- ![! 1 1 ance, will not permit a permanent success. ]ij |i The service we can offer you as a Ford owner is worthy X | of consideration. At home, we will not fail you, and X i ' wherever you may go, far or near, Ford service as at your ] | j ! command. ’ X i| NEXT TO GOOD VALUE IS GOOD SERVICE j We Have Both ! REID MOTOR CO. CONCORD, N. C. WE KNOW WE KNOW FORDS MOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCSOOOOOOOOOOO I It’s Time to Think of Fall Cleaning j To fully appreciate our Cleaning and Correct press ing is to give others the once over. . A phone call will bring our truck. X Telephone 420 M. R. POUNDS Dry Cleaning Department atioootMXX>otxxxxX)O0O0O0OOOoooonrOTonnflft0ft000000000g | ENTIRELY NEW 11 And Original Versions in Felt and Velour Hats Priced $2.45, $3.95 $4.95 on The range for color preva- f ' ]! lent in pther modes of sash- <| i ion hold true in these Hats, k !' X and the new fall shapes give X evidence of their continued tsX^V 9 popularity. —‘m \B • , ![ m 8 Youthful lines are emphasized boldly by decorations of |i O glistening metallic ribbon and other attractive ornamen- 1 'X 8 tations. ! y FISHER’S • iH Eis ht ilts Concord Daily Tribune I TIME OF CLOSING MAILS The time of the closing of mails at , the Concord postoffice is as follows: Northbound '136—11:00 P. M. 36—10:00 A. M. 34 4:10 P. M. 38— 8:30 P. M. 30—11.00 P. M. Southbound 30 — 0:30 A. M. 45 3 :30 P. M. 135. — 8:00 P. M. 23—11:00 P, M. LOCAL MENTION All wrestlers in the city and coun ty are asked to report at the Y. M. C. A. this evening for preliminary organ ization of the class. Marriage license has been issued by Register of Deeds Elliott to tV. S. Blackwelder. of Salisbury, and Miss Anna Belle Linker, of t'ais city. According to a deed filed Thursday at the court house Mrs. Amy V. Wat kins has sold to E. C. Barnhardt for i SIOO and other valuable considerations 1 property in No. 4 township. One hundred photographs, made by ’ the Concord tourists, will be placet! on , exhibition at F.tird's next week. These ■ views give a detailed picture account . of the trip. Rev. W. C. Jamison, of Kannapolis, : has returned from his vacation and 1 will fill the pulpit in the First Pres- i byterian Church, there at the usual 1 services Sunday. * Alfred Owens, a man over 50 years ] of age, was committed to the jail this , morning on an alleged theft of a knife , from a local five and ten cent store. He will be tried this afternoon. lreven. six-months-old daughter of 1 Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. I.emmond. died ’ Thursday at their home at Cabarrus. Funeral services were held today at '• the home and interment was made in ' the cemetery at Howells Church. i Seven defendants are to be tried | in police court this afternoon, police officers stated this morning. Six of , the defendants are charged with speed ing and the other with false pretense, , the police blotter shows. The Y. M. C. A. physical program in 1 the schools of the city will not begin 1 next week due to tile fact that this time will be necessary for getting the 1 work arranged for the coming year, i Regular classes will be begun Monday t a week. t All city school teachers will meet at J Central School Building Saturday afternoon at 4 o'clock. High School teachers will meet Saturday morning ■ at 11 o'clock at the high school build- ] •ng. Supt. Webb requests that the ] teachers have their health certificates. I Kannapolis lost its game in Fay- : etteville Thursday, the two teams now ! being even in the important series for i the state independent championship. 1 The two teams are in Kannapolis for ( a game this afternoon and will play i there again tomorrow. Hundreds of j local fans went up for today's game. | Theresa "Williams, the six-year-old i daughter of Mr. and Mrs. U. B. Wil- 1 Items, died at Mercy General Hospital J in Charlotte Thursday. Funeral serv- i ices were held this afternoon at the 1 home of the pareuts of the Xoreott j Mill and interment was made in Oak wood cemetery. 1 Miss Nancy Lentz arrived in Con- ' cord this morning to spend the day I with relatives and friends. She wag j en route from Greensboro, where she i had been visiting Mrs. Fred ,Csor- 1 rell, to Rock Hill, S. C., where she j will attend school this year at Wn- i throp College. Pittsburgh now has a lead of nine ] games in the National League, hav- | ing won again Thursday while New < York was idle. In the American J League the leaders were idle. In the < South Atlantic Charlotte smothered 1 Augusta but Spartanburg kept the ] lead by winning also. i The annual picnic for Confederate i veterans of the county is being held ' today at Rimer. Reports from the i picnic ground at noon stated that hun- 1 dreds of persons were present for the picnic, many Concord persons being among the guests. The program this ! year is said to be one of the best ever arranged, for the veterans. Those persons who thought the cold 1 days of last week were the end of | summer were badly mistaken, for t Thursday was one of the hottest days ! the summer. Temperatures np i proaehed the 100-degree mark in the i sun during the afternoon and there | was little relief from the terrific heat i during the night. There are still no i definite signs of rain. 1 Chief L. A. Talbirt, of the local | police department, is scheduled to i make an address before the first an | nual convention of the North Caro | lina section of the National Associa i tion of Policemen which will be held | in Grpensboro on September 9, 10 i and 11. All local officers are mem- I bers of the association and several j plan to attend sessions of the eon i vention. i Charged VVitth Mailing Attack on a J Young Girl. i Gastonia. Sept. 3. —John Sommer- J> sett, young white man of Gastonia, charged with criminal assault upon an eighteen-year-old girl of West Gas -1 tonia, is held in the local jail nnable to raise a $1,500 bond. It is alleged that the man took the girl into a patch of woods and attacked her. A farmer was attracted to the Bcene and [ stopped the assault. The girl then i fled to a negro home nearby. Sum merset will be tried in Superior Court. Following the example set by West 5 Australia some years ago, New South Wales has recently elected its first “ woman member of Parliament- The woman thus honored is Mias Preston Stanley, who has been prominetly i identified with the feminist move -1 ment in Australia. TOE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE TORCH THAT MELTS THE I TOUGHEST STEEL. Liberty. There's trouble ahead for the bank-' ere, and they know it and are arm-1 ing themselves against that new peril. J But their defense tactics muKt neces sarily be reinforced greatly by Science I before they will be of much avail J .against the new "yeggman," says an article in this week's Liberty by John W. Wilson and Edward H. Smith. Wilson is a widely known reformed burglar who plied his cunning in many parts of the country and was| known in the underworld as ."Caro-, lina Jack.'' Some years ago be ceas ed It's bank-robbing activities and has I since made a name for himself in the realms of legitimate business. After recounting a number of dar ing escapades in which Wilson figured during his safe blowing career, before he gave it up to launch into peaceful, lawful trade, the article continues: “I do not tell these things out of my past because I feel any bravado. In fact, what started me to writing about this is the circumstance that such scenes are coming back, after having been almost wiped out in the course of the last dozen years. “For now comes the oxyacetylene torch. Snch a torch can be found in any garage or machine shop, and is on# of the most common of modern tools. I'sed by a man who under stands the technique, it will play hav oc with any ordinary safe, in a few minutes and it has the advantage of being silent. By means of it the yegg will be able to attack many banks which lie did not dare tackle with the noise-making explosives. In fact, he has already pulled off upward of three hundred attacks on banks and other business houses. "This is only a small beginning, partly because yeggs are just learning to use tho torch and partly because there are later aud constantly more powerful types of the torch being de veloped. "1 may as well mention some of them. There is the fluxing rod, used with the ordinary torch, which makes it at least twice as powerful. There are the big welding torches, recently developed. "There is the pipe touch, which is to the ordinary thing what a siege gun is to a rifle. Finally, then- is the pipe torch used under a box of graphite, giving a most terrific heat, which is capable of reducing almost any safe or vault now in use. This is called the dog house attack, for those who like the colorful term- of the craft. "Inventions will have to be per fected to resist such frightful weapons, but it will be years before the new torch burglar can be headed off. Mean time there will be the worst fciege of burglaries ever recorded, or I don’t know my game. "1 said that I got out of yeggdom j; SCHOOL SUPPLIES i | iji Palmer Tablets ", X Ink Tablets , ! ! X Pencil Tablets Ci Pencils X Pen Points X Fountain Pens <!' Composition books. j [ !;! ink. Cline’s Pharmacy | Phone 333 oooooooooooooooooooooooc 10 PER CENT. DIS COUNT ;; On AH Orders For i i ! ! ENGRAVED ! ! : ; CHRISTMAS CARDS ] j i i placed during the month of i , j [ September. The advantages of ! 1 , i buying early are: You will save , i i money and will not have this to i ] ] think about later on when oth- 11 i i er matters are demanding at* \ | 11 tentlon. S. W. Preslar JEWELER IIIIIINIIIIIIIM^ D’ORSAYS PERFUMES Chevalier Muquet Charme Toujours Fidele Jasmin. Gibson Drug Store The Rexall Store iiiiiiiHimiimHHiHuinmiiiuniiiiiHi CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET . (Corrected Weekly by Cline k Moose) Figures named represent prices - paid for produce on the market: i Eggs .40 Corn $1.38 ! Sweet Potatoes L 75 I Turkeys .25 to .8 i Onions $L# i Peas $3.0 I Butter . ; _ J| i Country Ham _ 3 - Country Shoulder _ __ ■ Country Hides _ =fl Young Chickens 2 J t Hens .If i Irish Potatoes SUN “ concord cotton market I - r FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, IMS - Cotton 211-5 c*.. M .« bw-aiw I didn't w»nt to turn bandit, and that’s tho truth. Hr takes the most desperate chances, and when he feels the need he does not hesitate to shoot men down. I “Your flrst-rate yegg is never a killer. He Is out for the money, and ; he knows that the sure way to get the I law after him relentlessly and with ! out rest is to kill some poor fellow. Rut while the yegg, with such excep tions as exist in all classes, refrained from killing, the officers usually shot him, down at any and every oppor tunity." | The Pistol in the Car. Charlotte Observer. J The finding of a pistol tjieked away in the left side pocket of the Ford automobile in which W. TV. Ormond I sat when he wns shot and kitted by IW. R. Cole is a circumstance that doubtless will play a part in the trial of the Rockingham manufacturer. Certainly the defease may be ex pected to make all possible use of the fact that a deadly weapon .was carried in the car. a fact which usually suggests that one is “looking for trouble." 0 Two days following the homicide a dispatch sent out from Rockingham to the daily papers of the State, con tained this unqualified statement: "No weapon of any description was found on Ormond or in his car.” The statement was sent out by a correspondent on the scene, a man who has lived in Rockingham for years and was as familiar with the circumstances of the homicide as any many could be who had •no connec tion with it or with the parties there to. Now the question naturally arises, why has the discovery of the pistol in the automobile been kept from the public so long, for two weeks? The homicide was the talk of the town for days, and doubtless it is the chief topic of comment down there even yet, more than two weeks after the tragic Saturday afternoon. Every bit of information that, could have any hearing on the case one way or the other was a matter of much dis cussion, once it came to 4hp know ledge of the people in the streets or the stores and offices. Why was the discovery of- the pistol never talked so that any newspaper man, of the several who spent much time trying to get information bearing on the homicide, might chronicle the cir cumstance? What motive could one have for concealing the facts? Was it regarded as an incident of no par ticular interest or significance? Give “Pa Rooster” a Vacation. The Progressive Farmer. The Hens will lay just as many eggs without a rooster. Such eggs will not hatch, of course, but they keep much better, don't spoil nearly so quickly in summer as eggs from flocks where roosters run with hens. NOW IN SEASON ill JOHNSON’S LIVER MUSH For Sale by Leading Grocery Stores and Meat Markets. Only 20c lb. PHONE YOUR ORDERS | COAL 1 The Right Coal For the Right Purpose A. B. POUNDS | ; PHONE 844 OR 878 ! ! OOOOOOOOOOOPOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOPPftPffOOOOOO 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 I North Carolina Popular Excursion i | TO WASHINGTON, D.C Friday, September 4th, 1925 II VIA . • J ■ f SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM j j y Three whole days and two nights In Washington. X ROUND TRIP FARE FROM N. C. gQ 8 Special train leaves Concord 9:35 P. M., September 4, 1925. Ar- 1 ( A rives Washington 8:40 A. M. September 5, 1925. 0 Tickets on sale September 4th, goctd on refejlar trains to junction j 9 points, thence Special Train. Good to return on all regular trains (ex -1 A cept No. 37) so as to reach original starting point prior to midnight [ O of Tuesday, September Bth, 1925. X Returning regular trains leave Washington 8:20 A. M., 11:00 a. B m., and 3:45 p. m., 7:00 p. m., 9:35 p. m. and 10:50 p. m. >8 ' | 8 1 Big League Baseball Games ® X Washington Senator vs. Beaton Red flax Two Games—September sth and 6th 0 Q A fine opportunity to see Walter Johnson, star pitcher of the Sen- A 0 X ators; Ike Boone, etar fielder, the Red Sox, and other great stars in 0 0 A action. ' * 0 9 This will also be a wonderful opportunity tp visit Washington's 8 0 X many public buildings; Arlington National Cemetery and the various O 0 5 other points of interest. • 0 9 Tickets good in pullman sleeping cars and day coaches. No stop- Q 6 B overs and no baggage checked. 8 O Make year sleeping car reservations early. 8 0 9 For further information call on any Southern Railway agent or 6 •' A adress: / 8 M. H. WOODY, Ticket Agent R. H. GRAHAM. 8 X Concord, N. CL Division Passenger Agent, 8 2 o 8 Hence 4s one of our farm poets suy:i| “Go put the rooster in a pen < Till breeding season comes again: ] Or if he's just a common scrub, j You'd better make him into , grub." Car Williams of the Oklahoma j Farmer-Stockman is emphatically , campaigning for this idea. Under the i heading. ‘Goodbye, Pa Rooster.” bis j paper says: "The time has arrivel for Pa i Rooster to take bis annual vacation. J and on every well-conducted farm ar- i raugements are being made for his < departure.” "His lusty erow may be missed i for a time by the light sleepers, but 1 few people will regret the absence of ] this harbinger of the day. "Pa Rooster is an important in- -j dividual during March and April when he performs the worthy func tion of being father to al’ the baby chicks on the farm, but after the , chicks are hatched, he is of no < further use and is more or less of a 1 nuisance by being in the way. eat ing feed which might well go to the more useful members of the flock. “Pa Rooster's vacation Is not a matter of sentiment to the modern poultry keeper but is looked upon-as a practical business proposition. The j city man who orders soft-boiled eggs l during July or August appreciates the fact, that Pa Rooster is on a ! vacation when he eats a dean, wholesome egg. Should he. however, ] be so unfortunate as to draw eggs ( from a farm where the rooster stays ( homo all summer, the quick-lunch j counter is likely to lose a customer I and the price of eggs takes another, 1 tumble.” “It’s an ill wind,”- said the Kansas 1 farmer, as his nagging wife disappear ed in the tornado. K. OF P. NOTICE. Regular meeting Concord Dodge No. 51 K. of P. Friday evening at 8:00 o'clock. There will be work in the first rank. All members are urged to be present. E .E. PEELE, C. C. BIDS. Are requested for the erection of a Filtration Plant at the Jackson Training School. Plans and specifi cations are on file at tne office of the institution. All bids must be in the hands of the committee on or be fore Tuesday noon, September 15th, 1925. The committee reserves the right to reject any and all bids. This the 3rd day of September, 1925. Concord, N. C. CHAS. A. CANNON. JAS. P. COOK. Committee. 4-2 t-o. I The Early Bird ' V\ Finds Earlier Birds at Hoover’s jQyPprf! '\ j So many men are coming ear llbl y lO avo 'd the rush that there il v¥ ” * las een a rHS h to see the new U UiJSI Suits ever s ’ nce they ar- In other words—the early bird has got to get up before breakfast to have the field to himself. As soon as 8 A. M. these Schloss Fall Suits are displayed to men who were up at 7-and in dozens of cases we are selling in September new suits to men who usually wait until Thanksgiving. Sft your alarm for tomorrow— j SCHLOSS NEW FALL SUITS- iVlFJlll HOOVER’S,Inc. m “THE.YOUNG MAN S STORE’’ OOOOCOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOQOOOOOOOpoOQOOt OOOOOOOOOOOOOBOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCCOOOC I— — GAS, SIR? 4^ es ' s ' r ' depend on our service a greases and other lubri HOWARD'S FILLING STaI Sm pHONE h BBO mI,e " OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOt<OOOOOOf>ruyyvvrayy<y)QoQ{i BUSD^^^^URES The biggest percentage of business failures are mostly due to men who take a chance without capital. A better way is to wait and save while you are waiting and be financially ready when your opportunity comes. A grow ing account in this Bank will, establish your credit and give you the money when your time comes. CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK ij Capital $400,000.00 Resources Over $3,000,000.00 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 will stay cold while you are gone. Kelvinator requires no time or attention and la trouble free. It usually costs less to operate Kelvi nator than to buy ice. Phone or call for detaik Yorke & Wadsworth Co. J Kelvinator J 'lj Tk« Old*.i Don*, tie Elieitl* 1 Friday, September 4, 19251

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view