Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Sept. 8, 1925, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR 1 The Concord Daily Tribune i| " J. B. SHERRILL B Editor and Publisher \ W. M. SHERRILL, Associate Editor B MEMBER OF THE §, ASSOCIATED PRESS 3- Hie Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited to it or not otherwise ' credited in this paper and also the lo cal news published herein. All rights of republication of spec p ial dispatches herein are also reserved. K Special Representative FROST, LANDIS & KOHN 225 Fifth Avenue. New York Peoples’ Gas Building, Chicago 1004 Candler Building, Atlanta Entered as second class mail matter at the postoffice at Concord. N. C., un der the Act of March 3, 1879. I ■ SUBSCRIPTION RATES In the City of Concord by Carrier: One Year SO.OO Six Months 3.00 Three Months 1.50 One Month .50 Outside of the State the Subscription Is the Same as in the City | Out of the city and by mail in North Carolina the following prices will pre vail : One Year $5.00 Six Months 2.50 Three Months 1.25 Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a Month All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in Advance RAILROAD SCHEDULE In Effect Juue 28, 1925 Northbound No. 40 To New York 9:28 P.M. ‘ No. 136 To Washington 5:05 A. M. .No. 36 To Nfew York 10:25 A. M. No. 34 To New York 4:43 P. M. No. 46 To Danville 8:15 P. M. No. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P.M. No. 32 To New York 9 :03 P. M. No. 30 To New York 1:55 A. M. Southbound No. 45 To Charlotte 3:55 P. M. No. 35 To New Orleans 9:56 P. M. No. 29 To Birmingham 2 :35 A. M. No. 31 To Augusta 5:51 A. M. No. 33 To New Orleans 8:25 A. M. No. 11 To Charlotte 8:05 A. M. No. 135 To Atlanta 5:35 P. M. No. 37 To New Orleans 10:45 A. M. No. 39 To New Orleans 9:55 A. M. Train No. 34 will stop in Concord to take on passengers going to Wash ington and beyond. Train No. 37 will stop here to dis dharge passengers coming from be yond Washington. ---'I!.‘--ini:;- I A BIBL E THOUGHT | J FOR TODAY—I [II Bible Ttaoujtf.t* memorised, will prove a 11 |||j nncelObs heritage in after yeara 3j Safety of the Perfectßehold, , God will not east away a perfect ( man. neither will he help the evil doers.—Job 8:20. STILL USING BONDS. Many persons get scared as soon as bonds are issued. They are not will ing for their town, county. State or Nation to issue bonds for anything if they can avoid it. The Charlotte News finds ‘‘there is no let-up in the way the people of the South have been going in debt during the year in the form of bond issues/’ and quotes fig ures from The Manufacturers Record showing that during the first eight months of this year 1020 issues of public improvement bonds, aggregat ing $*279,5N(»,900, were sold for con struction work in the South. Highway improvements lead the list with $101,599,503, Florida standing out conspicuously to the forefront with nearly one-third of this total. West Virginia and North Carolina following. In the issue of school bonds, of which $35.274.444 were sold. Florida leads with nearly one-thinl of the to tal. or $10,937,000, while Texas sold a fraction more than one-half as much as Florida, the other States falling far behind. Georgia was third in the list with $3,007,800. Missouri fourth with $2,007,000 and North Carolina next with $2,571,500. Bouds sold for the building of sew - ers amounted to $32,205,000. and in this case Misouri leads with $11,792,- 000, while Oklahoma with $3,850,000 h was just a little ahead of Florida with its $3,745,000. In the total for the eight months of $279,880,900 Florida is far and away ahead of any other State with its $70,253,000. the uext in line being North Carolina with $25.0*2.000. Tex as with $25,583,000 and Missouri with $23,211.00. the other States fall ing considerably behind all of these. THE DROIGHT’S ONE ASSET. While the terrific drought in the South has cost the farmers and busi ness men thousands of dollars, it can * be said to its credit that it has ae- J complished one good deed—destruction of the boll weevil. At this time of the season lust year and the year before Cabarrus County farmers were reporting many weevils y in their cotton fields. The same was true of other sections of the State. To date we have heard nothing of the "weevil in th ; s county and judging by * the fact that no reports of its activi ties are made from other sections, it is to be presumed that the insect is less active in other quarters also. | Bp; While experts do not. agree op ull ’ H matters concerning the weevil, it is |f generally agreed that the pest cannot stand continued dry weather. At the fell same time it is agreed that he cannot fe 9ve through excessive cold weather. It .talked a general fixture for tfye |g- w*tytl.Vto : he lias not had a ; general ltriiaure of *weathcr in this v suction of the* year. f," Give the wkevit afllttle warm weath- K. «r with showers mixed in and lie will multiply,by the thousands. Give him | Ws of raiu and he doesn’t do so well; jk Neither does he thrive in excessively 1 d*y weather. >t So the farmers can at least be . thankful for the fact that while weath er conditions have damaged their cot ton crops the crops have not been eat ; en up by the weevils. BE CAREFUL ABOUT FIRES. i Concord citizens should guard eare ■ j fully ngaiust fires now. If a real j blaze should start in the wake of the drought great damage more than like ’ ly would result for buildings are dried las a result of the lack of rain and there is none too much water availa ble with which to combat a fire. It is the duty of every citizen of Concord to conserve what water is on hand. If we waste our water there may be a real crisis here. Certainly if a serious fire should break out aud great quantities of water should be needed the situation would be grave. If the present water supply is guard ed a crisis can bo avoided. People here might as well take the “no car washing, no lawn sprinkling" law with good grace for the situation can't be helped. The city officials did not want to adopt such a policy but they were forced to. There is just so much water for the city and no more. It is useless to grumble, and the man who skips around and evades the law is a menace. We can get along all right without washing our cars or without sprinkling our lawns if we will just make tip out minds to do it without grumbling. So far as any one knows grumbling will not bring rain and the situation will not improve until rain falls. The sensible thing for everyone to do is to co-operate, We should not only do what we have been directed to do, but we should go a step far ther and save every gallon of water we can. In that way we probably will be able to avoid even mpre drastic laws. SHAFT UNVEILED TO CONFEDERATES Beautiful Monument Erected At Al bemarle By The U. D. C. AlWnu-ido'. Spt. s —Stanly county ll4s ?lt last jjOli'.retj her Confederate dead. Today -a intm unu-m was uu veiled here by the local chapter of the United Daughters of Confederacy. Pratically alt of Stanly county’s liv »'r pvsnt to witns-imfnimaishrling ill* Veterans of the war of-the sixth*.. Were present lo witness the unveiling ceremonies. The veil -itself wap removed from j the monument by the hand of Airs. I Sid Austin, one- of Albemarle’s old est. aud most beloved women. Tile ceremony was presided over by tin president of the local chapter. Mrs. •T. E. Ewing. Major T. A. Halhcock. world war veteran, made a short talk and introduced R. L. Brown Esq., who delivered a splendid address. Following the addresses of Major 1 latlu-ock and Air. Brown, the old soldiers, the members of tile local chapter 1 . I>. C., and the members of tin? children's chapter U. D. C. marched from the courthouse to North First. 'Street where the monu ment is located Miss Alary Alabre.v made the presenting speech on be half of the- local chapter and the same was accepted by (j. E. C. Coble, chairman of th board of county com missioners. Tilt- Children's Chapter of F. I>. ('. sang “Bonnie Blue Flag” and other songs which added much to the im pressiveness of the- occasion. The Wiscassett-Efird cornet band also rendered |t-veral selection ending with “Dixie." A feast was then furn ished the old veterans and the, mem bers of the I . D. C. and the mem bers of the children's U. D. C. in the banquet ball in the basement of the First Presbyterian church. Genera! Strike at Kong .Moon. Hong Kong. Sept. 7.—CP)—A gen eral strike has been called by the Chinese at Kong Aloon. The customs house there lias been closed and em ployes have left for Alaeo in a launch. The British gunboat Aloohm has left for Kong Moon. Canned Goods Specials 35c- Can Sausage p* Meat __ 43C 35c Can Cooked gy p* Brains Z OC Pink Salmon, « p. per can 1 DC 15c Can Campbell’s Pork and -| A Beans lUC 1 Lb. Pail Peanut OC Butter ZD C 15c Can Van Camp's t Milk lUC 35c Can Cacoa fy r (1 Lb. Size) ZDC You Can’t Beat Our Prices—And We Deliver Cabarrus Cash Grocery Company PHONE 571 W South Church Street I *3T\lif HUNT'S GUAR ANT EEC •—mjS?' i I skin disease remedies (Hunt*# Salve and Soap), fail it f Yl the treatment of Itch, Eczema £A Ringworm, Tetter or other itch ~ ing skin diseases. Try tbif treatment et our risk, BUEn m Money hack without question A*** if HUNT’S OUARANTEIJ) SKIN DT9BABE RSMBDIKS (Hunt’s Salve and Soap),fail in r the treatment of Itch, Eczema, j Rinrworm.Tetterorotheritch- f Jt# / / Ing skin diseaaaa. Try tills » / j treatment at our tiek. I ) ! PEARL DRUG COMPANY 1 mil'* ELMER E.VANCE William Basil Courtney Copyright, 1925, Warner Bros. I “THE LIMITED MAIL” with Monte Blae, Is a pletnrlzatlon of this story by i" Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. i SYNOPSIS I Jane Gordon, whom Bob Wilson, . the engineer, had known years before, has reappeared unexpectedly, and is f spending the night with Caroline Dale, , whom Bob loves. Suddenly a neigh . bor appears with the information that the Limited has been wrecked, that Jim I Fowler, the mail clerk, has been killed • and that Wilson and little Bobby Fow ler are missing. Jane declares to the mystified Caroline that Bob Wilson is her husband. Then she disappears. CHAPTER IX—Continued There it was, all in front of her— revealed. There was no doubt in : Caroline’s mind that Bob Wilson and Bob Snobson were one and the same person. Snobson! Caroline trembled to think of the social pres tige and position of the man she loved. The proud, cold blood of Puritans was thick in Snobson , veins; they were the Matterhorn of the country’s social Alps. When the Limited Mail, west bound, pulled out one sultry night . two weeks or more after Bob’s dis appearance, Caroline was a passen- , ger, crumpled in a corner of a Pull man seaL_a wan, pathetic, hopeless ( figure, fleeing a past that promised , no future—nothing, but dreary lone- j liness and an always virginal heart. ( CHAPTER X When the exigencies of a mellow- * iirg physique had made the brake * rfids no longer safe or comfortable * outlet for his wanderlust and had ‘ forced Potts to write ex- to his be- - loved calling (as he had written it I long years before to his teachersbip * in the college) and to seriously un dertake retirement, he did so with ' no small or rr.qan gesture. Ex- '. vagabond and cx-professor though < he might be, Potts would die before 1 Bob Wilson with little Bobby ' shared Pott’s shack. i giving up the liberty and the phiio- j sophic calm and peace of his avoca t i o n—nature-loving. Therefore, knowing that this would in all prob ability remain his home for the rest ' of his placid life. Potts had looked j around the vicinity- that he loved best | —the awe-inspiring mountain bil lows above Crater City. He had looked with an eye to solitude, to , beauty, to utility. And he had chos- [ cn.well and .wisely—a sun-drenched land harbor, a little cove of grassy bottom between shores of . high boulders and towering pines; an overlooking y-et unseen place where Potts could revel in the con- 1 tentment of doing nothing, while his ruminative eye mused over far flung prospects, and from where he could see the TransrocUian tracks below and with the air of a travel ling connoisseur, watch and listen to his favorite trains. Here he had leisurely patched together, using odds and ends of timber and nonde script material, a makeshift shack— his palace, as uncrowned king of all he surveyed in a capital of hobodom that was_too lonesome a place for anyone except eagles, and hobo ' philosophers—and fugitives. One of the latter class had found Potts a comforting host for two ’ weeks past now. For Bob Wilson, together with little Bobby, had shar ed the peace and the concealment of Potts’ shack since the day following ’ the wreck of the Limited. When Boh had stumbled away from the scene of the catastrophe, bearing Bobby in his arms, it was . without definite plan or purpose. I All that night he had wandered aim lessly in his grief, far back into the country, then returning to the rail - road after dawn of the next morn | ing, and crossing to the west side E of Granite Gorge. Not far from l I * How to Secure Good Honey. Moigumon, N. C.. Sept. B. UP) —S. J. Bird, of Silver ('reek, after keep ing bees for several years without get ting uiyyJi honey,- is the experience of sptheOK. ,- ■ ' . i That ,is.the inforiihiFun for.County I Agent R. L .Sloan, who says: **|Thi>! I ybar lie is going r td* follow instructions given by the extension specialist in , be keeping aud -lias agreed to re j qyeen, use modern hives, ami otherwise J adopt up-to-date methods." * Many Burke county farmers who THE CONCORD DAItY TRIBUNE here Potts had found the wayfarerl , and taken them “home.” Bob had not cared or dared to venture out of his hiding-place since then, but from papers brought back by Potts j from his daily foraging excursions j to the tracks Bob learned that he i was held responsible for the wreck i —learned how he had run past the Rise Ravine Junction signal. He re membered that this was the mo ment of which he had dropped his his watch. And he cursed the Fate that seemed to be making endless game of him. On the same night that Caroline fared forth from Crater City with broken hopes and heart on the west bound Limited, Bob sat up late in ! the doorway of the shack, watching storm cohorts marshalling behind a bulwark of clouds in the west sky and then sweeping across Nature’s eternal battlefield of the sky accom panied by the drumfire of the thun der’s artillery and flashing of light ning. Potts was an early retirer, as well as an early riser; he was snoring on a pinebough bed in a far corner of the shack. Bobby, too. was asleep —on a grass mat before the embers of the evening fire. For Potts’ con struction skill was such that he had been able to round off and complete 1 the homeyness of his shack by a n stone fireplace and chimney. • I 1 Bob. looking at both, strangely- q felt no anchoring impulse to remain | here tonight. The end had come for ' him. He had been responsible for ] the death of his best friend. He 1 had undoubtedly forfeited'whatever | place he had attained in the affec- ! ( liens of Caroline. Perhaps he should have gone ] back and faced the music, ' l yet it would be enduring tfie ! cfoss without getting the crown: < he would have been willing to take j ™y punishment did he hut know- ( that (. aroline would be waiting for { him at the end, that she would un- < derstand and forgive. But his own j stupid indirectness and dodging had j stacked the cards against him, < where his only purpose had been to j save hen the pain of naked know- < ledge. He had wanted to apprise ] her in a gradual and saving way. < Then, always, there was Jane! ] Still. Jane could have been disposed 1 of quickly enough if publicity no ! longer mattered—it Caroline knew.' l In this state and for his reasons,-^--iJ divorce after all these years of res idence would have been but a mat- ! ter of days. Bob wondered what had happened between Jane and : Caroline. Had Jane told everything? A hat had Caroline thought—of that, and of the present involvements? He wondered how she had borne up under the tragic news of the wreck and her personal interest in it. V\ ithout knowing so, Bob was en during a form of nostalgia—of home-sickness and lonesomeness for the girl who, within the short space of a few days, had come to mean everything in his life. He told him self glumly- that all of his indecision and immediate troubles had been due to the intoxication of finding himself in love, of fear to touch up on anything that would disturb or interfere with that love. But things bad certainly been swept away from bis clumsy hands. "What the hell difference does anything make?” He josc and stumbled away from 1 the hut through the rain; in his 1 dazed, trouble-drugged mood he I was under a sort of enchantment', j and thought of nothing except claim- I i.ig surcease in the oblivion of the j Gorge. ' Unknown to Bcj), Bobby had been j watching him for some time—pre- 1 tending to sleep only as an excuse | under which to work out his mis- j chievous plan to frighten Boh. I W hen Bob started away from the j but, Bobby decided that his oppor- I ’unity had come. Part of the “furnishings” of j Potts’ mansion was a square, bleached bit of muslin of the size I of a crib sheet. This had been al- J lotted to Bobby in order that his grassmat bed might be as luxurious j as possible. But with childish dis- 1 regard for the social standing of ! this vicarious bedsheet in a house of pinebough beds, he now utilized it as part of his scheme to throw a scare into Daddy Bob. With a glowing end of stick plucked from the fireplace Bobby burned two eyes in the sheet, clucking gleefully to himself meanwhile; then he draped the sheet over his head and ran out into the night to follow Bob. (To be continued) have done this, All-, bloan says, Uuvej secured good honey ciops, and will l.e' examples, the agent believes, to the J qthei- who; like Bird: havd gotten lioUey only ja (gJSidsj eiif).. \ f.L Radges High Wheel of Forty Years Ago. ’ j Youngstown, 0., Sept. B.— Although \ 65. t.'. lAU Shicely, of Berlin Outer,! still rides* the high fhheel bike lid rode over forty years ag> when he went to gee his sweetheart. i METHODISTS WILL, BUILD NEW CHURCH B. N. Duke Gives SIO,OOO Ear Meth odist Church at Clwpe) HiU. Chapel Hill, Bept. s.—Realizing the vital importance of building a church adequate to meet the oppor tunity of ministering to the religi ous life of the eight hundred and more students from Methodist homes who spend nine months of formative IH-riod each year in Chape: Hill, the Methodist alumni of the University of North Carolina and' the members of the denomination throughout the .State ereated a joint commission re- I presenting the board of church ex it eneion ami the board of suasions |of the Western North Carolina and the North Carolina conferences tind ! the Chapel Hill Methodist Church to ! make proper provision for the buiid ling of a church adequate for the re ! ligious culture and development of ' their youth attending the University On Wednesday, with the pew church almost half completed, the joint com mission met in Chapel Hill to review . the work* • 1 The commission met here at noon 1 with Rev. M. T. l’lyler, of Raleigh, chairman, presiding. After the meet- i ir.g the members lunched at the par sonage, and later in the afternoon inspected the building ad pi-ouds, 1 During the meeting the chairman an nounced a ctyil ribut ion of SIO,OOO from Mr. It. N. Duke. t.RIST CLEARED OF CHARGE, J Capital Printing Company Was Only - Concern That Filed a Complaint. Raleigh. Sept. s.—Frank Grist, ; commissioner of labor and printing, i went free of all charges of favoritism | I School Supplies jj § I | This Is Headquarters For 1 SCHOOL SUPPLIES j Q Everything you need is now here for your selection. ' 1 0 Special Tables—Quick Service—Courtesy—Honest ij R Trices.; i , ■t ' • , u .;. ... ~- t . ;.j »■ • ~||i § Tablets Pencils, Crayons, Scissors, Note Books, Pens, ]! O Inks, Pencil boxes. Book bags, Crayolas, Rules, etc., etc. i]i 8 May r we serve you? M KIDD-FRIX I Music & Stationery Co. ij: | Phone 76 58 S. Union St. Concord, N. C. ) j .yvvyv%cvvvv>fyvv>ooooQoooooooooooooooooooc^gf>ooooo& I T,IK SEWEB PIPES rla\ arc the most important in the g v X house. They must t* absolutely l must be kept free and clear. Upon \their condition health and possi hly life itself may depend. If you , - p there is the least thing wrong with j . W your sewer pipes, send for us at M once. Delay in such a matter is E.B. GRADY PLUMBING AND HEATING DEALER Office and Show Room 39 E. Co-bin St. Office Phone 334 W flUHii'i fizTspT Z -■,, . - t.-, tTT'ia ■Lnanijja— INSURE When You Start To Build U .The r 'g»t time t 0 take out insurance is when you start H building. Then if through any cause your building snould fi burn, even before completed, the Insurance will cover your g loss. I Fetzer & Yorke Insurance Agency 9 _ Successors to Southern Loan and Trust Co. U p B FETZEB A. JONES YORKE . , , jjfl x . 900COOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQDOOCM3000000000QobfliOOOOOO IHAVOUNE OIL | Is More Than Oil. It is POWER We Are Now Ready to Supply Youi With HAVOLINE « Mutual Oil Company PHONE 476 R. i <3900000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 FANCY DRY COODS WOMEN'S WEAR in the allotment of state printing, and the meeting ofthe printing com- j mission, which today absolved him, j received bitfa for the $150,000 print- ( ing job authorized by the last gen- j eral assembly. , The findings, wiiich were made in j re«i>onse to a demand for an investi gation, all favor Mr. Grist, who call- - ed for the inquiry. It' wae made by [ Assistants Attorney General Uhar’.es i Ross and John H. Harwood. They received but pi)e. complaint as to state printiug and th’at- came from the Capital Printing company, of 1 Raleigh. The total contract for the j state printing was let September 1. i 1023, two years ago. Merged Churches to Be “First Meht odlst.” (Charlotte, Sept. s—“ First Method-1 iat. church" will be the name of the new consolidated congregations of the : Tryon Street and Trinity Methodist 1 churches in this city the name hav- ' ing been unanimously chosen at ah joint meeting of the two committees 1 of five members from each of the two churhcos. i James A. Bell was selected as (hail-mart of the joint committee, the two committees headed by Dr. A. M. Whisnant and E. R. Bucher, of the Tryon Street and Trinity cmirches, respectively, merging into the gene ral committe. Arthur H. Wcarn was selected as sec ret ary. All nt the 10 member- were jiresent at the or- j ganization meeting. Unanimous approval of the pur chase <vf the Oates property, 110 by ( ■HM) feet fronting on North Tryon 1 and North Church Streets and ex- ] tending along Eighth street, was given by the committee. BELL-HARMS FURNITURE Co> j New Victor Records I] | 19Y17 10 Dear, Oh Dear with guitar and harmonica. Vernon Dalhart |8 ■j Who’s It, Who Loves You —Who's It, Huh?, with guitar •nd harmonica —1 Vernon Dalhart 10718 10 I Miss My Swiss (from “Chauve-Souris") with piano J : | ' The Happiness Boys As a Porcupine Pines For its Pork, with piano j [ The Happiness Boys 510725 10 Sunshine, with Ukulele Wendell Hall It Struck My.Funrty Bone, with Ukulele Wendell Hajl.B ■ 10T31 10 Every Sunday Aftdrnoon, with piano by Smalle..Revelers jfl Just a Bundle.-of'Sunshine, with piano by Smalle—Revelers 9 ! -i.t DANCfi RECORDS 8 10719 10 Indian Dawn, Fox Trot ..Paul Whitepiaa and Orchestra 9 I | Ogo Pogo, Fox Trot, with vocal refrain - | i Paul Whiteman and His Orchestva sty j 19720 lOFootloose, Fox Trot, vocal refrain by Billy Murray Jfl i Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra Sing Loo, Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and Orchestra 10721 10 Sonya, Fox Trot, with vocal refrain | j * Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra W Got No Time, Fox Trot .. Paul Whiteman and Orchestra » Ji| 10726 10 Why Is Love? (from “June Days”) 1 11 Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra hfl You Forgot to Remember, Waltz, with vocal refrain SB Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra CM !j , 10710 10 Row ! Rotv ! Rosie, Fox trot, with vocal refrain 5 1 i! George Olsen and his Music qI 5 Say Arabella, Fox Trot __ George Olsen and His Music 01 J 1 10 When Eyes of Blue Are Fooling You. Fox Trot A'Xl 1 1 » • Howard Lanin-Benjhmiu Franklin Hotel Orchestral Qm < On a Night Like This, Fox Trot Howard Lanin-Benjamin Franklin Hotel Orchestra gl g 19713 10 Hawaiian Love, Waltz Hilo Hawaiian Orchestra sis ft Beautiful Gown, Fox Trot, with vocal refrain Hilo Hawaiian Orchestra jfl j!| 10714 10 The Prisoner's Song, Waltz, with vocal refrain '(9 1 1 International Novelty Orchestra 1(1 1 1 After the Ball, Wt.ltz, with vocal refrain i 1 il International Novelty Orchestra ■ ] I 1 1 10715 10 Save Your Sorow For Tomorrow, Fox Trot | 1 - George Olsen and Mis Music j ! I .The Kjss ICant Forget, Waltz, with vocal refrain i I |!| ■ ‘ ' ’ Internatjonnl Novelty;Orchestra ! C l 19722 10 If I Ever Cry, Fox Trot- Ted Weems pud His Orchestra ' 5 ... Liberia, Foz TJrot —-,-.|Tf4 Weams^nd 1 His OrClWrtt I ! !][ 19,27 Dp f m Fox Trot (A Paul Wbitegmn OrcliepD'a) g 8 T , „ Busac’s Buzzards Q ii Jm. Gonpa (Tiarleston Back t,o C|iarlestoti, Fox Tym, with i fi 10700 .. Vocal wfwiif -.CoWi-amdere OMgiiial -Nighahawf Orth? '! 5 IJ7.S 10 Alone at Last, Fox Trot, with vocal refrain fi c. Coon-Sandcrs Original Nighthawk Orchestra !( Stop Flirting—Fox Trot, ..Meyer Davis’ Le Paradis Bund ' BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. | oMu; vr/urer " Jdr /jfe In the bathroom tlicre is JKI t demand for plenty of bril liant light and your fix w jr tures must be especially ■ ■JI designed to provide tliis necessary light, while at T| the same time securing JE an artistic effect. Ask y . ■ us how. “Fixtures of Character” tk I M W. J. HETIICOX m W. Depot St. Phone 688 * *lrar 000000000000000000000000 || Wilkinson’s I || Funeral Home Funeral Directors and Embalmers Phone No. 9 * Open Day and night Service . > ■ Tuesday, Septembers, 19a We have the fol lowing used cars for sale or ex . change: ■i One Ford Touring One Buick Touring | One Buick Roadster j One Liberty Touring I Chevrolet Sedan Body STANDARD BUICK CO. v City Fir -- ifip Department I Add the Comforts of PLUMBING to Your Home i Modern Plumbing will do | as much or more than any oth ; er one thing toward making \ your home a comfortable and convenient place in which to live. It costs you nothing to get our cost estimate. . , ' '' ' ' ’ : : j. i Concord Plumbing Company North Kerr St, Phone 576 9
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 8, 1925, edition 1
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