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_ t •' */ x Tuesday, October 6, 1925 - * mii * — ■ *"' • 1 LSUCIETVI , -S' •acfi i*rttny of the new fur colWs have' ribbon ties or streamers that give a Slightly frivolous aspect to a very practical garment. Fashion these I days does nbt insist upon our being i severe, as to line or material, and I J pup# only that we make ourselves •"* attractive. i D. A. R. MEETING HERE THURSDAY MORNING: Sessions Will Be Held In Sunday' School Annex ad Central Methodist Church,—State Officers Expected, The full progruip foe the Third; District Daughters of the American Revolution meeting to be held here on Thursday, is announced today by the | program committee. The Cabarrus Blaek Boys Chapter will be hostess, j Sessions of the convention will be held in .the Sunday School annex of ' Central Methodist Church, beginning! at 11 o'clock. After the Business ses sion a luncheon will be served at the Y. M. C. A. A number'-Cf State officers of the! D. "A. It, are expected to attend the meeting and pla 11k have* begg made to entertain a number of former national , officers. • The third district lias a member ship of several hundred and at least 125 visitors are expected for the meet ing- ,s All members tis the Cabarrus Black B<-.vs chart e?’ tiiffv asked 3 <*»b<y,u resent ut II: oi-Wt't iwor.dof xfiat they fagy help receive the guests as the yar , rive. , Smith-Kinnett Invitations. Invitations as follows have been re eeived here: Mr. and Mrs. George Thomas Kinnett j invite you to be present Hfe at the marriage of their daughter Ann Elizabeth ocooootBt: •Henry t. Xmlfh •'<s6<x:(; on Saturday, the twenty-fourth of October One thousand nine hundred and twenty-five at twelve o’clock Uivoli Macon. Georgia At Home Kannapolis, X. C. A woman—Miss I and a A. East man—is at the head of the Cleveland public library, the third' largest li brary system in the United States. ” ~ x ~ i - ! SORETHROAT I tonsilitis or hoarseness,- ' gargle with warm salt water. Rub Vicks over throat and cover with a ; hot flannel doth. Swal low slowly small pieces. X/ICKS w Vapoßub Our 1 million Jar, UmJ Ymarty , f - ■ !<■ i TT* I Sold By ■’ ! 1 * BELL-HAlBteS rfnt- 1 URAL PARLOR • j D*y Hum no C Night Phone* ’ MO-158L PERSONAL Miss Annis Smoot will leave to morrow for Greenville, S. C., where she will spend a Week visiting her brother, Watson Smoot. • • • Mrs. Frank Bunn and child, of Los Angeles, are visiting at the home of Dr. and Mrs. J. F. Dann. • * * Mrs. Sam Petrea, of Gastonia, is visiting at the home of her parents, j Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Griffin, on Soutii j Union street. [ ' George R. Goodwin, of Raleigh, has . returned to bis home after visiting ] friends in Concord. Luck-Query Wedding in Bedford oil Thursday. The following invitations have been received in Concord: Mrs. Georgiy W. Luck requests the honor of your presence at the marriage of her daughter Mary Estelle . to ' Rev. Stafford Morrison Query j on Thursday morning. October Sth j nineteen hundred twenty-five at ten o’clock Bedford Baptist Church Bedford, Vg. At home j after Noverbor Ist Moutvale, Va. ! Among the persons leaving Concord j for Bedford to attend the wedding | are Mrs. .1. F. Harris, Mrs. W. Scott i frieze, J. S. Query, of Kannapolis, and Rev. C. N. Morrison, of Dunlap. Music Club Meeting Tonight at Mrs. Ritchie's Home, In the meeting of the'Music De i partment of the Woman's Club which is to be held tonight at the home of Mrs. C. F. Ritchie on South Union | street at 8 o'clock, a number of mat j tors of importance are to be taken up for consideration and all members are urged by Mrs. Ritchie, who is chair | man of the department, to be present, j Tile following is the program : Biography of Bach—Mrs. J. F. Reed. Vocal Solo : "My Heart Ever Faith ful. Bach—Mrs. C, B. Wagoner. Piano Solo, Prelude from "The Well-Tempered Clavichord"—Miss Ruth Dry. 1 iolin Solo, selected—-Miss Jones. Vocal Solo, selected—-Mrs, C. B. Wagoner -1 : ■' “r n I DURHAM’S POPULATION / NOW PLACED AT 42.258 Taking of Census By I'nited States ‘Census Bureau Numerators is Completed. Durham. Oct. .‘l.—Durham now has a population of 42,258. The re sult of the count of tile residents of the city of Durham which has been conducted here during the past three weeks under the direction of the AJsieted .NtntoK-ceiiMis Bureau Was -offi cially announced thfx afternoon. More than a score of enumerators have scored the territory which the city embraces during the period in which the count was being made ami it is believed that but few. if any, persons were ■ left out by the force whiich made the count. Last April much new territory, in cluding East and West Durham, were taken into the city limits amt' the addition of this added thousands to the number of the city’s residents. J- T. Nicholas, nupervisor of the count, tonight certified the following -figures: Total population 422258. 1 Thera are 28.087 whites, 13.569 ne groes and two Chinese; there are ] 18.848 white males aud 14.844 white females. There are 0,201) male negroes and 7,277 female negroes. Both > Chinese in the city are males. There were 21,719 people in the city of Durham on January 1, 1020, and 11,- 807 peop'e living outside of the city . of durham Within the boundaries-' of j Durham township. Hornsby Is Year's Champion Home ! Run Hitter. Chicago, Oct. 4. —Rogers Hornsby, j manager of the St. Louis Cardinals , and champion hitter of the National , League, is the 15125 home run chant- ( pion of the major leagues. , I The St.'Louis star bit 39 in the j season ended today while hi.- nearest , rival. Bob Meusel. of the Yankees, , j cotne With 32. "Babe” Both, ; i wlio bolds the record for home runs I in the major leagues with 59 smashed ■ i out ill 1921, got a late start this year and did not play regularly hut lie cashed in with 25. tying Ken Wil- . Hants of the St. Louis Browns for third place among the four-base olout ers. In 1022 Hornsby had 42 homers, a record for the National leugue. Mrs. Lockwood Jones Dies in Char lotte. Charlotte, Oct. o.—Mrs. Raeolic 1 Wilkes Jones, wife of Lockwood Jones. aucKilaughter of the late Caps. and Mrs. John Wilkes, of Charlotte, died Friday at her summer home at Saluda. The funeral will be held in j Charlotte Sunday, interment in this city. She was born and deared in Charlotte and was 65 years old. Be- 1 side her daughter. Mrs. Joseph Hiill, she is survived by a sister. Mrs. A. E- Rankin, of Wellesley Hill. Mass., and two brothers, Frank and Reu wiek Wilkes, of Charlotte. She was a member of St. Peter’s Episcopal church and prominent socially. | John J. Parker Named U. 8. Judge. 'Washington, Oct. 3.-—John J. Park er, qf Charlotte, N. C., was appointed a judge for the Fourth Circuit Fed eral Court of Appeals tqday by Presi dent Coojidge. Mrs. Parker, wjio Is a lawyer, suc ceeds the late Charles A. Woods, of Marion, 8. C, His appointment was recommended by C. Hascomb SJemp, 'of Virginia, former secretary .to the Prvsidhnt. A celebrated favorite of the Mexi can stage for more than thirty years, Esperanza Iris is now retiring with ' u fortune of »eu»|y a million dollars accumulated from tier earnings and fortunate investments. i RIVE RING CIRCUS REALIZED AT LAST Ringling Bros, and Barnum & Bailey Enlarged to Accoupnodate New Big Acts. » At last the five-ring circus! For years reporters have used this figure of speech to describe the big ness of the Greatest Show on Earth. Now, for the first time in history? pat rons will actually find five rings when the greater Ringling Brothers and Bar ■ nutn & Bailey circus of 1925 comes to Charlotte October 19th. With the addition last winter of enough performing horses to bring the Big Show’s total to three hundred and fifty the problem presented to the Mingling Brothers was, "How to han dle five troupes of them in a single display?” The limits of the show grounds in many cities forbade leng thening the main tent. None of the stages could be spared. AH were need ed for the big collective groups of human actors. Then somebody sug gested that enough of the “big top” paraphernalia could not be cut down nor yet “spread out,” there was no reason why it should pot be “built higher.” That suggestion was wqrkcd out and now, in addition to.the three floored rings, two additional rings have been constructed to fit over the tops of the steel structured stages. This is the greatest innovation since the Ringling Brothers started their super-circus policy by combining their own with the Baruhm & Bailey cir cus. It has opened the way not only 'flfr trained horse numbers in sets of fives but for other big, new displays. Though there are more than eight hundred men and women arenic stars oi f the mammoth program of 1925 on ly a few of the most brilliant are pre sented singly. Instead they are pre sented in imposing ensemble. These group's extend over the entire length of the huge main-tent—seven, nine, as many ap eleven troupes in actjflii at one time. In keeping with this plan of giving tile spectators at tile ends of the tent just as much "show” as is enjoyed by those nearer the center, live herds of elephants are now pre sented instead of A hundred clowns distribute theier eaper.ings in all parts of the "big top.” The hippodrome track is utilized more than ever before. At one time it is completely circled by one hundred and fifty trained horses, each ridden by an expert, 'in al amazing ballet and "Fete of the Garlands,” Again it is filled with glittering pageants, with splendid high-school horses or remarkable thoroughbreds that give thrilling exhibitions of lofty-hurdling and hazardous high- jumps. ORMOND I WROTE ' !; ' ! * OF CASWELL LIFE Told Editor Harker of His Experi. enees While in Training at Fort. Wilmington. Oct. 4.—" The w ind is blowing hard o)i the battery tonight —no good old coal fires to sit by,” declared IV. IV. Ormond, dead at tile end of \V. B. Cole’s pistol in August, in a letter addressed to W. B. Hark er, editor of the Maxtou Scottish Cchtef, from Forst Caswell October 9.1917. Mr. Ormond, who with James (Skeeter) McQueen, volunteered with the Wilmington light infantry, theft’ designated as the Eeighth Company, Coast Artillery Corps, North Caro lina national guards, trained at Fort Caswell, near this city, for nine tnqnFas, prior to embarkation for overseas service. Lawrence Everett, mentioned in the following letter, who was a tent mate of Ormond, is now located in New York, where he is connected with Alex Bprunt aud Sons, Inc., cotton exporters of this city. RUSSIA GOES WET AFTER 11 YEARS OF PROHIBITION Thousands of Bottles of Pre-War Liquors Are Released ’at Nominal Price. Moscow, Oct. 4.—After eleveu years of partial prohibition, Russia \ today became completely wet. Wills- i key, brandy and liquors containing ] CO per cent, of alcohol, again appeared i in t'ae cases, restaurants and stores. 1 The dew order was to have gone | into effect October Ist, but us this i was within the recruiting period of ] the Red army, it was postponed un- , til today. Several Hundred thousand J bottles of pre-war liquors of various j kinds, which could not /><* sold pre- i viously on account of their high alco-U holic content, were automatically re-1] leased for sale .at from .$1 to $4 a i quart. j 1 Heretofore the government Has \ maintained a monopoly of the manu- i facture and sale of spiritous liquors, bnt under the new order private in dividuals will be permitted to make and sell liquor. Asheville Sees Big Population Growth. Asheville, Oct. s—-Indications that the city of AshcviUe, proper, will at tain a population of more than 65,- 000 within the next five yells if the present rate of influx continues aud that with its sqjjurbs it will include from 100,000 to 130,000 permanent inhabitants, show in a survey of gen eral conditions just made public by the Chamber of Commerce, accord ing to officials of that organization. During the past five years from 1920 to 1925 the city population has increased, it is shown in the govern ment census tables, more than 50 per cent. In 1920, the population for the city of Asheville was 28|504 as com pared with the 42,756 inhabitants | listed in the 1025 tabulations. Few Cotton Co-Ops Break Contracts. Asheville. Oct. 3.—Less than one fourth of one per cent of the cotton growers who have signed up with the North Carolina Co-Operative Cot ton Growers’ Association have declin ed to live up to their agreements and forced the association to resqrt to legal compulsion to make them abide by tlie decision, according to A. B. Braroe.'.of Italejgh. of, the Jegjil.de imrtnjreht'uf tlri> association, who spent Haturday and a part of Sunday in Charlotte. / Qttegp Alexandria has a model: dairy al Viandriiighain, in which at one time she lists I to spend some of t the happiest hour* of her life. ?he Cobicokb bAiLY Tribune KITCHEN ORCHESTRA TO HAVE STRANGE MEDLEY ’ Unusual Instruments to Be Heard In War Mother's Program Friday When Art Scores Triumph. An otustanding event of the music i al season in Concord is the program ■ which is to be given Friday night in the High School auditorium when a ■ new organization, the War Mother's i Kitchgn Orchestra, makes its debut in a succession of pleasing and tuneful : notes. Advance notices from persons in charge indicate that it will be one : j of the most spectacular “first nights” ever seen in the city. Such an ar ray of talent has seldom been gathered on one platform previously and the ■ instruments they play are not otrly varied but are unique. Os the most popular of tjie instru ments a coffee pot crossed with a gazook seems to hold the spotlight, although then* are many who contend that the dishpan when struck with a souii ladle is perhaps a more reso nant of tone. Music critics in the 1 city are waiting breathlessly to !tear the new combinations which are to be tried out and herald the program as an advance in art. It may be said in passing that a strange feature of the orchestra is that there are simply no well-tcmptred clavichords in it. It was thought that these instru ments would be much to gentle for the War Mothers. It is the aim of the committee in charge to put on such a program that 1 the general public will not only have a greater appreciation of music in its highest form but that it will also be uplifted and inspired to bigger, bet ter things. As a Rtotto for tiie new organiza tion, "Sfnsic hath - charms to sooth the savage beast,” was thought most suirable. There was, howeverf a small clique, those extracting music from rolling pins, who were quite deter mined to have as their slogan the very original words, "His Master’s Voice.” with a photograph of their husbands directly above the words. School Boys Sworn in as Traffic Cops. Salisbury, Oct. s.—ln an effort to protect life and limb from traffic ac cidents safety patrols from all four of the city schools have been selected and sworn in with limited powers,as traffic cops. Each patrol of boys has a captain and they arc to be in com munication with Chief of Police Cabbie. Mayor Henderlite swore tile boys in as traffic cops and they will wear badges when os duty. • These bof# writ lie drilled this I week by U. T. Matthews, of Greens-j boro, who will lie here as a repre sentative of. the; UundiiLa Motor CH9) to help caih-.v out Safety if eek pro- j gram, Mr. Matthews besides drill iug the boy?: will address civic clubs ! and school assemblies on safety meas- 1 ures. ENGAGEMENT EXTRAORDINARY Fbnnkft force 9fc*?S** JYD CHAPLIN *MJN| Dtncttd ty Scott Sidney onmTiE mSTtSSMPANY inc* tout niM) tro DtjßftMwyfbrUnlMKMM* 4 ftftUndbe CONCORD THEATRE Wednesday and Thursday jij New Shoes For Crisp Autumn Days! | 8 SUCH A VARIETY OF LOVELY STYLES! BLACK 8 8 VELVET, SATINS AND PATENT STRAP §! ]!; AND STEP-IN PUMP.? * | j!| Attractive, Distinctive and embrac’d by Unusual o ijl Wearing Qualities. They lit perfectly, giving added grace ?! :]i| and beauty to the foot. Triced for economy— 9 j $2.95 TO $6.9 5 | i MARKSON SHOE STORE 1 8 PHONE 897 J! ■ »QOQOPOOf»OOOOOCy>OOOOOOOWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOeO) ! 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 110 PER CENT. OFF For AH Orders For Christmas j Greeting Cards Before Nov. Ist The Gibson and Refiefagraph Lines 11 Kidd-Frix Music & Stationery Co Phone 76 58 S. Union St., Concord, N. C. ] OOOOOQOOOOOOOgQOOgOQgoooooooooooogoooOQOOOOQOOOOO PROPOSES THAT COrNTT BUILD “COMFORT” ROOMS i Q. E. Smith Asks That County Com missioners Construct flest Rooms on Church Street. County Commissioners, in session Monday here, were given something i over which to ponder, when a propo i sition was made by Capt. Q. E. Smith, i City Engineer, that they construct a "comfort building" as soon as pos sible for the convenienve of the farm ers and their families. No definite action was taken in the ' matter, it being thought best to de j fer action until the next meeting, j which will be held a month hence. ] Accord : ng to the plans presented by I Mr. Smith, the building should be I built on Church street, in close prox-1 ] imi*y to the County building. It 1 j should bo placed directly on the street, said Mr. Smith, not stuck in some back ■ j “SLYMPH” I j 5 . fi | is highly appropri- il jj ate in name for this o v ravishing Pump. By n > its utter simplicity t (i adorned with a ij * fetching bow, it be- I jtf comes most interest- fi 8 ing to the /woman J> \ seeking a daytime H shoe. In patent U u leather of a superb U \ j? quality. C ( 1 11 Bench made. u ?, $6.95 jj i s ■ i i '•» -RUTH-KESLER J) f SHOE STORE “fi 1? -\ , ; -I] lot. 1 It was pointed out to the County Commissioners that as things stand at • present, there is no place for people I coining in from the country to go to rest when they come to Concord. When they spend the day, as many do, ; shopping in the city, they are incon venienced because of the lack of such a building. With this building as headquarters, visitors from the cbiAty would have a comfortable place to go when they get tired and their stay in the city would be made much more pleasant. Numbers of persons on the sereets have been heard to remark favorably on such a project, declaring that it was a thing that the city had needed for years. J According to the law in Argentina, three-quarters of a wife’s earnings can be taken to pay her husband’s ‘ debts. 1 -- ; llllllllllllllllllllllllllll||||||||||||||l!|||: GIBSON DRUG STORE cordially invites the public to attend the Play-by-Play Radio Reports „ of the World’s Series Baseball Games ] I* urnished through the courte- < sies of the Concord Telephone Co. J Gibson Drug Store | The Rexall Store iiiiiiiniiiiimiiißgiwiiiHHmiiiiHiii •oooooooooooQQOOOooaaoooc ! | ] concord produce market \ (Corrected Weekly by Cline & Moose) f Figures named represent prices I paid for produce od the market: Eggs .40 s Corn £1.35 1 Sweet Potatoes , 1.75 Turkeys „ .25 to .30 Onions £1.50 Peas £3.00 Butter .30 Country Ham T .30 Country Shoulder _ .20 Country Sides .20 i Young Chickens .25 Hens , Irish Potatoes £1.50 Make Your Hens Uy Eggs Are Very Scarce and High in Price Como Laying Mash Corno High Grade Scratch Feed Untro Hen Feed These three are all sold un- \ der an Absolute Gjjarantee. Your hens are now 'moulting. J Treat them good. Very soon 1 they will be feathered again ! lay you high priced eggs. | Naked ,half starved hens 1 will not lay. | Corno Feeds give big re- ] turns. We deliver quick ev- 1 erywhere. Cline & Moose CHATS With Your Gas Man - GRANDMA SPEAKS j “I hear much complaint from the l young housewives of today long! hours in the kitchen, arduous house-1 hold duties, hot weather work and the | like,” commenots an elderly woman. > . *‘l wonder what these young girls! would say if they had coal buckets and wood bins to fill, ashes to carry I out, lamp wicks to trim and washing to do, over a sizzling coal stove. It seems to me they are surfeited with conveniences but utterly lacking in their sense of appreciation.'’ | Grandma is correct. iWe arc lit-' •rally surrounded by the most marvel lous conveniences known to mankind. Yet bow ousy it is to think lightly of them or even forget them. Sometimes it takes the older generation to bring us to our senses. A description of domestic duties fifty years ago gener ally makes one thaukgul for the blessings of today. 1 ■■ f Concord & Kan napolis Gas Co. j Phone No. 142 Last week came a man who pennies” but who owns bar- |I jjp makes every one count. A ! ‘‘lf your prices are not too ' jNI fl J steep, I’ll buy a suit today— pP&jS _■ j “Ala ! but 1 won’t pay a farthing \ iIHH JjplP , over $40,” was his speech to ( 1 \ou don t even have to pay $40 —for we have cahinct af ter cabinet of fine suits to fit you sir. at $32 and $35,” we 1 rice> tut, tut, —at BROWN'S—tliev are too reasonable tto reason with. j Roberts-Wicks Suits $25.00 to $45.00 IfSi Roberts-V icks Top Coat- $25.00 to $40.06 Knox Fall Hats $7.00 to $&00 81|| CANNON BUILDING - ! Where You Get Your Money’s Worth Browns-Cannon Co. I Where You Get Your Money’s Worth QH CANNON BUILDING |H oc> Jooo ° ooo oooooooooocxx3oooooooooooooooc' JOOOOOOOOI ) FREE VOTING COUPON |!| )• ,n The Tr *bune and Times “Everybody Wins” Grand Prize Campaign flip GOOD FOR 100 VOTES Ip I 1 i» ereb y cast 100 FREE VOTES to the credit of— . jj H H Address ‘ !i! HR I . This coupon, neatly clipped out, naime and address of the candidate Tyjl f failed in, and mailed or delivered to the Election Department of The A Ttsbune and Times, Room 209 Cabaa-rus Bank Bldg., or P O Box Kg p * 31 ' wiu count as !00 FREE VOTES. It does not cost anything fit l cas . t tUese coupons for your favorite candidate, and vou are not Hpi !! stneted in any sense in voting them. Get all you can and send them in S 3 |f «ey all count. Do not roll or fold. Deliver in flat packages NOTE* KI jg —lbis coupon must be voted on or before OCTOBER 10th. KS | All Is Not Gold That Glitters— 11| ;![ . 4° llot l° sc sight of this met and be misled bv beaU-» ISI J tifully illustrated circulars and catchy phrases. These do 8 S |i| not make good cleaning. 5 Ji[ c clean and finish your garments better and assure 8 li iji 3*ou perfect satisfaction. x 9% |j| telephone us today M.R. POUNDS I DRY CLEANING DEPARTMENT 1 J| tXXXX>OOOOOCX?OOOOOOCXXXXXXXXXac»O<xaQOCXVVy>c>rvyioooOOf» I K.L. CRAVEN & SONSti j|| PHONE 74 COAT sl I ||| M m. ■ M Plaster J W ]!; Mortar Colors § M -XJOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOCOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOfIOOOO^M j Poultry Market Is Getting Better 1 SINGE THE EXEREMELY HOT WEATHER IS PAST I We are now in a position to pay you 20c per pound for heavy 9|| Leghorns and light hens. 18c. H Friers 20 to 25c per pound as to size. Eggs 40c dozen. I Butter fat higher—we are now paying 43c. H Bring us your produce of all kinds. U 1 Why peddle when we pay you as much or more. I C. H. BARRIER & CO. I ate. i::; isssssmssst NEW THIS WEEK , For Tomorrow and Next Week’s 11 I Selling • I Splwidid new fali models that will appeal t<f the most critical buyer of ■■ GOOD SHOES. They are so reasonably priced that you’ll be surneis- I ■ ed at Styles offered. "tww Fat Step-iu Pump with buckle ; « 758 I ■ Pat 4 strap Effect with gouring .jW 1 I One strap Black Velvet Pat #tep-l» Fumps (plain) —ZZZUI ” SSfll One strap Pat. Medium heel ’MOO IVEY’S II ’THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES” B I ■ ■ -.J PAGE FIVE