Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Nov. 6, 1925, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAGE EIGHT ’iu4iaasaagaiima33m3&T«xai&^^ ■gP?" . V • '*£';s * I i g Comfort at Small Cost Buck’s Circulating Heater will heat two to four rooms with less 4 | than you can heat one room with an open grate. | Built of heavy east iron, all joints fitted air tight. No smoke or j gases in the room. Outside jacket ijj cast iron, mahogany enamel, re- jj p quires no polishing. j; Duplex grates easily cleaned, perfect circulation, pulling the l jj! cold air from the floor, and nearby rooms, sending it back heated. 3 Water pan in top of heater gives a moist heat circulating and chang- u pj ing the air in the room every thirty minutes. More comfortable and j % healthier than steam or hot water. Let us iustall one in your home }' £ on free trial. Terms if you like. ! Concord Furniture Co. 1 w 1 THE RELIABLE FURNITURE STORE 1 • B JOHNSON'S PURE PORK I UVER MUSH I IT IS DELIVERED FRESH EVERY DAY TO ? YOUR GROCER i Price Only 20 Cents a Pound OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQ I THE UNIVERSAL CAR 8 It has truthfully been said that a murderer cannot !| Jj! keep his secret, and the truth of the statement has been J> j j proven many times. It has been found to be equally as j| i i true that the attitude of an individual, or firm, if consist- !j J J est will sooner or later be known. ji Jij In our business, we feel that a deep confidence has '! iji been shown in us whereby we operate as the Authorized !j !jl Ford Dealer of Concord and its trading area. \Ve are J' ]j| glad of the opportunity to aid the service the motor car is j! jji giving our people, and it is our purpose to promote the 'J iji good will of our industry, which was founded for your ser- J JiJ vice, convenience and pleasure. j REID MOTOR CO. CONCORD’S FORD DEALER J 1 Corbin and Church Streets Phcfee 220 I 1 iHnrairaggßrra*Maa * -r,t 4,,^-h INSURE When You Start to Build The right time to take out insurance is when you start building. Then if through any cause your building should burn, even before completed, the Insurance will cover your loss. Fetzer & Yorke Insurance Agency Successors to Southern Loan and Trust Co. P. B. FETZER A. JONES YORKE aOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Y. M. C. A. Members Take Notice!, j THE SPECIALTY STORE Headquarters for All Athletic and Gym Equipment S. Union St Opposite Courf House wOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOI ' ■ i; . : ;V‘V ' - • :j t X f Concord Daily Tribune TIME OF CLOSING MAILS J The time of the closing of mails at the Concord postoffiee is as follows: Northbound , 3 136—J1:00 P. M. 36*«-10:00 A. M. " 34 4:10 P. M. ■I 38— 8:30 P. M. 30—11:00 P. M. I Southbound 30— 9:30 A. M. 1 43 3 :30 P. M. i 135 8:00 P. M. j 29—11:00 P, M- r| "LOCAL MENTION | s ’ Mrs. V. A. Means is confined to ’ her heme on North Spring street on' ; account of illness. ■ Iredell Superior Court will convene; Monday at Statesville with Judge ;’ John M. Oglesby presiding. . W. A. Foil, who has been confined ; to his home for the past week with [ pleurisy, has improved somewhat,ami 3 is reported as resting well. * R. J. Roseman, deputy collector for i the state of North Carolina, spent s Thursday here on business. Mr. Rose man collected a number of special l privilege taxes while in the city. A petition is now being circulated to add one and one-tenth piilesto Rural Route No. 2 from Concord. It is desired to have it changed at Mas on Goodman’s west to L. O. Seaford’s, thence southwest to the present route. Marriage licenses were issued to the 5 following couples Thursday by Regis ” ter of Deeds Elliott, both couples liv .{ ing in Kannapolis: Mack S. Hubbard ;1 and Miss Myrtle St. Claire, and Carl ii Williams and Miss Geneva B. Huff’- ll man. * The Children’s Society. Ttie Light if Brigade of Calvary Lutheran Ci.ureh, ;j will give a pageant, ’’The Fruit of the Thanksgiving Tree" Saturday evening. !i November Bth, at 7 o’clock, to which service the general public is cordially invited. 5 Vital statistics which have been re ; ported at the County Health Offices ! here for the month of October are as [ follows: No. 3 township. lNloath: No. { 6 township. 4 births and 2 deaths: | No. 7 township. 4 births and 4 deaths. ; No other reports have been received. ( There are many indications now t that Concord is all set for another S wet week-end. A slow, steady drizzle ! began falling here during the night ; and has continued most of the day. ! with heavy clouds overhead. Weather ; reports indicate the rain is general throughout this section of the state. A Tom Thumb Wedding is to be Staged at the Graded School No. 2 tonight at 7 o’clock, at which time, a j number of the small children are to take part in the bridal ceremony. As ■ er the wedding, a fashion show will be put on by a number of the mcr * chants of the city. I Football fans in Concord will go to i Charlotte tomorrow for their closest ) game. Davidson and Hamden-Syd- I ney play at Wearn field in the only j game in this part of the state. Caro | line plays V. M. I. and State A'. P. 1. J while Duke and Wake Forest meet in | Dui’nam. | Three eases are on docket for trial » in recorder’s court this afternoon, po- E lice officers stated. One prisoner is 5 charged with speeding, another is f charged with selling liquor and an « other with an assault. Business with ; the officers has been rather quiet dur t ing the week. < i It is known that a number of per sons plan to spend Tuesday night i here en route to Charlotte for the i auto races Wednesday. Charlotte ho ji tels already have engaged most of i their rooms, it is said, and a number I of persons have engaged rooms here ]i for the night before the races. j Tomorrow will be a big day at | Duke University because of the Duke i Wake Forest football game, but the |; memorial service to James B. Duke J will not be held until Wednesday, No- Ji vember 25tb, according to information [ received here by trustees of the uni- Ji versity. It was first planned to hold i the memorial services tomorrow, j i Men who have not returned tfieir II cards to Mr. Blanks indicating that l[ they will attend the Sunday Morning 11 Prnyer Breakfast are asked to do so lj at once iu order that lie may know how large a number for which to pre pare! Dr. J. C. Rowan will preside at the breakfast which is to be serv j ed in the Y. M. C. A. It is considered likely that Miss Delma Hersperger, who is teaching expression in the city, will have a class in Kannapolis as soon as she returns from New York. Inquiries have been received here from promi nent people in .Kannapolis which in dicate that they would like to have their children take this work if passi ble. An effort is being made by Mr. Blanks to impress on the public of Concord that everyone is invited to attend the Vesper Service at the First Presbyterian Cliureh Sunday after noou at 5 o’clock. This is being held under the auspices of the Y for pray er week. Rev. R. M. Courtney, pas £ tor of Central Methodist Church, will - preach. There is nothing to reports here i that a recent fight occurred in the. J jail between prisoners. “It is noth i ing unusual for prisoners to have 1 • verbal tilts, but there has been, no fight,” one jail attendant stated “You see some times the men wake J up feeling bad, and this fact, to i j gether with the fact that they are in i i jail, make* them prone to prgue.” i i George T. Moore, of St. Louis, j says that the average city dweller would ga : n from 25 to 35 pounds a J*nr if the body retained all the Boot j and duet breathed in. O The coat of traffic delays in New 5 York City is estimated at $900,000 1C P«r day. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE PREACHING THE SIMPLBJFAfTiI I Winston-Salem Sentinel. There was an interesting hit of utaff correspondence in the Raleigh News and Observer of Sundjty bv Ben Dixon McNeill with reference to a I sermon, delivered by Dr. George W. Truett. great Baptist preacher of Dal las. Texas, at Chapel Hill Sunday, j It is particularly interesting be- I cause of the fact that Dr. Truett will preach for a week at the First Bap tist Church here, beginning next Thursday evening. Some extracts from the news ar ticle about Dr. Truett’s sermon fol low : f “The preacher might have done two filings. He might have invited the interest and apiu-oval of the young agnostic by straining toward what the i moderns call liberalism. Or he might have taken up the cause of the nat 'Lural intolerance of the young bcliev- I ers ami inveighed-against* the as nat ! ural inability of the other group to accept tlje meticulous faith of the fn mlamenta’iist. “He did neither. He ignored them both, lie preached to them, he preached to all men the simple faith, that he himself has lived, that neither ques tions /tor is intolerant or critical or hostile toward any man. And from the moment he opened the book and began to speak there was a hush up on the audience that endured until lie was done, and they were passed out into the pale October sunshine and were gone. • "Perhaps they both went away ashamed, those who have it, ai the littleness of their faith, and those who had it not ashamed at their own doubting. “The sermon itself was starkly simple. Its language was a language that anybody could understand. The manner of its delivery was without a single gesture or tone that could be called spectoctilar. The preacher scarcely raised his voice, save in one magnificent moment when he, quoted two stanzas of the Recessional toward the conclusion. But somehow it struck home with all the power that thou sands came to know' when Truett ; proa filed in Raleigh, and more. To day it seemed somehow to be n re ; virile. “ ‘God wants, not your life, rot what you have, but you',” was the theme of it. For a text he had a verse from the story of Hezekiah—' ’When the burnt offering began the song of the Lord began.’ Hi*"appeal J was to students to give themselves to" God, all of themselves, without reser vation. This, he declared. Is file true destiny of man, and withour it life in the end can be nothing but emptiness. “Not in tlie whole of 45 minutes cf the sermon was there a single sen tence that could be seized upon, quot ed, and held up with. This was what Dr. Truett said.' unless it was when he declared that where life is offered, any cause must triumph, and that the tragedy of Christian life is its hrart lessness, the consent of the professing Christian to live tepidly. “Os problems with which believers and unbelievers fret themselves hdsaid nothing. To him nothing matters but that a man shall give liitbself wholly to God as the first preparation for life, and with that done all prob lems. all doubts, all fears, all things that best and becloud life are past.” There is something in the example given by Dr. Truett in that Sunday sermon that some other ministers and students of religious matters might well consider. He was so busy prc&ching Ihe simple faith to those students that he had no time to discuss dogmas, no inclina tion for o dissertation upon theologi cal points. He was so interested in giving those students something they could live by that grumbling and con troversy, and theological hair-split ting, had no place whatever in his discourse. . Ur. Truett is one of the greatest preachers in the world today. He is so great that he does not have to resort to the expedient of WELL KNOWN PAINTER EN DORSES HERB JUICE Mr. B. B. Hatch Says He Thinks Ev ery One Should Know About TWa Great Remedy For Stomach Trou ble. Every day in the week hundreds of Concord and Kannapolis people call at Gibson Drug Co. to see the HERB JUICE man and'thank him for the wofiderful relief his medicine has giv en them. Mr. B. B. Hatch, well known Concord citizen, who resides at Concord, N. C., R. F. D.. (1. was among those to call a few da vs ago and to show his appreciation for the relief HERB JUICE has given him. He requested that the following state ment be published, in order that .hU friends and others might know about this famous medicine. Mr. Hatch > said it was through an aunt. of mine I that I learned about HERB JUICE.! She advised me to use it for stomaeh trouble, with which I had been both ered for some time. My food did not digest, but instead, just lay in -the stomach ahd fermented: gas would form, which kept me bloated all the time, could not sleep or rest well •t night, and was always badly conati . pated. But as bad as ray condition was, your HERB JUICE seemed to . help me from the start, and now, as , ter using it for some time. I feel like a new man. As for stomach trouble —say my stomach could not be in any ' better shape. I eat anything I wnnt - and never have had any bad after ef i sects from gas or indigestion pains, sleen fine at niglit and feel rested when JUICE has also proven to me that I get up in the morning. HERB > It is truly a wonderful regulator and r through its natural action on the i bowels has completely relieved me of I "onslipation. My friends have used this medioinc and sal they have found it satisfac tory in every way.*. ' HERB JUICE Is sold and guaran > teed to give rnttsfaction In Cuamd by Gibson Drag Co. “SNAPPY” ! happily tcrm6 this classy Oxford. It’s 1 I the kind men like to wear. So comforta- ! ble, so well made, it j typifies the ultimate ! any man can buy for little money. $4.95 UP RUTH-KESLER ( SHOE STORE creating interest in wliat he Rays by being spectacular and sensational, as j some preachers less ability ahd dis tinction sometimes seem to feel that | they hove to do. The Sqntinel feels sure that the op portunity to hear this outstanding minister of the Gospel at the First Baptist Church during the week be ginning Thursday will be eagerly sized. The Written Uw For Once. Winston-Salem Journal. The jury at Hendersonville did not have to rely on the unwritten law for an excuse to turn their prisoner loose. Brooks, the barber, who killed Bryson, the Mayor, re lied sole y upon the written statute on self defense in his appeal for acquittal. It was different in Rockingham and Durham. Cole had no eelf-dy fense pica. ' Neither did Wiles at Durham. They killed without being attacked. In order to acquit them both juries had to resort to soine ' thing other than, the written laws of North Carolina. In Hendersonville, Brooks killed Bryson to save his own life. It was proved that Bryson shot first. Both men were armed. But Brooks nad more reason for carrying a gun than did Bryson. The ex-Mayor had ruined the barber’s home. That was admitted. The ex-Mayor had agreed to leave town and stay away for a given period. He did not keep his agreement, but returned armed for the fray. When he fired, what was there left for the barber to do? The Henderson county jury’s task was a comparatively easy one . In view of the great ease with which the juries in Rockingham and Dur ham arrived at their verdict, it. is surprising that this sturdy mountain jury slthuld have required two bal lots to nnd their prisoner not guilty of murder* under the writteu laws of i this Commonwealth. Dur'ng the "flu” epidemic the health authorities in several cities and communities selected and adopted Loths Hot Blasts—because the top draft drew down into the heater the impurities iu the sick room. See these most healthy heating stoves at special sale. Yorfle & Wadsworth Co. 2-6 t-e. CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected Weekly by Cline A Moose) Figures named represent priorn paid for produce on che market: Eggs .00 Com sl.lO Sweet potatoes $1.50 Turkeys 25 to JO Onions $1.50 Peas $3.00 Butter ’ .35 Country Ham .40 < ountry Shoulder .25 Ountry Sides 20 Young Chickens 2S Hens .18 Irish Potatoes $1.50 Molasses, Sugar Fresh Cabarrus County Sorgum Molasses. Its scarce this season. To be Bure to have a supply for at least a part of the season we bought the output of thhree of the best makers. We have it. Call us. Send your ves sel. , Fine Porto Rico Molasses. It has that high flavor nnd very fine quality. You can always find it with us. Domino Fine Granulated Sugar, is the best. We sell it debaucse it is the best. We deliver quick everywhere. Cline & Moose i I BROADWAY CENTRAL HOTEL i’ 667-877 BROADWAY NEW YORK „ « 1 , Accommodations For 1,000 Guests In the heart of the down-town business section. Connections to all parts of the City within a few minutes from our door NEWLY FURNISHED AND RENOVATED | High Class Service at Low Rates Large Banquet and Convention Halls Ipdslf! Roses are gone, and vk>ie*s are too. and we'll soon be. because the coal 1 bill's due. It's j«* hard to drown your troubles in liquor. The blame stuff seems to 1 j fatten them instead. The man who buys the dre.-s Is < I willing for it to be shorter if she will J | only wear it longer. J i I'neasy lies the head that wears a 1 ■ crown of long hair and wishes h. j were bobbed. We all can't go south for the win ter, but the north wind seems to be on its way. Bandits cease their looting and the warriors their fighting when It rains in China, insuring peace to citizens, j ' ! 1 \ i K. OF P. NOTICE Regular meeting Concord Lodge No. , 51 K. of P. Friday evening at 7:30 ' o’clock. Work in Second Rrank. j E. E. TEELE. C. C. i Armistice Day 250- i Mile Championship Race, Charlotte ; Speedway, No vember 11th, 1925 SPECIAL ROUND TRIP EXCUR SION FARES VIA Southern Railway System FROM STATIONS SHOWN BE- ' LOW: ] Round From Trip Fare Winston Salem : Kernersville 2.50 Guilford College 2.50 * Greensboro 2.25 ' Jamestown 2.00 High Po nt __ 2.00 Thomasville __ 1.75 Lexington 1,75 Spencer -- 1.15 Salisbury 1.00 China Grove 1.00 liandis .75 Concord .75 Kannapolis .75 Harrisburg .00 Newell .50 Tickets on sale Wednesday. Novem ber 11th, good going and returning on all regular trains (except 37 and 38). Final limit midnight Nov. 11th. Round trip tickets on sale also from Washington, Jacksonville, and all Agency Stations North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Eastern j Tennessee and Eastern part of Geor- J gia including Line of Southern Rail- j way Chattanooga to Macon. Dates of sale November oth and 10th. Final limit tp reach original starting point prior to midnight Nov. 13th. Shuttle train service November 11th Southern Railway between Made in Carolina* Exposition Building and the Charlotte Speedway. Frequent service. Round trip Fare 75c. This is a fine opportunity to sec this Championship race. Prizes $25,- 000. For further detailed information 1 call on auy Southern Railway Agent. 1 R. H. GRAHAM, D. P. A-., i Charlotte, N. C. i l CONCORD COTTON MARKET. j ) I FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1925 j I Cotton 18c i | Cotton Seed ; .43 1-2 1 ) \ t V '• - % ON SALE AT Gibson Drug Stpre The Rexall Store We can state with full authority that we have beeu handling Loths , Stoves and Ranges’’ for thirty years , and that they have proven eminently satisfactory. They are made in the “Shenandoah Valley” of Virginia, of the best iron obtainable. See Loths Hot Blast at Yorke 6 Wadsworth Co. 2-flt-c. f JHr SSO Worth of Overcoat A Style for Meft Who \ I Wish to Pay $35 ' ■ I*lH * 1 ' sls worth of Weightahle I H r 1 economy—With sls. worth 1 H V* ffi* \ of added style—rinfaking a ( | " l ffi total of S3O Velvet—be- I 11 HR sides the $35 value, i „ I , ffi The identical, same, long, ; ft 1 ffi wide shouldered models I t ffi that men are paying $3Ol 1 J M p ' to $75 for. The cloths are soft, warm and appealing and the whole | proposition sums itself into this— " . I to Thoroughly appreciate these coats* : YOU MUST KNOW WHAT OTHER STORES ARE ; ASKING SSO FOR. i Schloss Top Coats v Schloss Tuxedos HOOVER’S,Inc. “THE YOUNG MAN’S STORE” i ooooooooooooooooeooooooOoooooooooooooooooooooooc oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooot ! COAL I The Right Coal For the Right Purpose 9 A. B. POUNDS PHONE 244 OR 279 —.ii iii i i::\ —— j SUCCESS IN BUSINESS—. j • The start and development of a business requires cap- i. - ital, experience, industry and a good banking connection. | s The resources of this bank are available to its custom- | ers for the promotion of promising business enterprise and p t we invite you to investigate our facilities to meet your | l particular needs. | CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK jj rr.TT-Ft-n T'l TTTTT:TT..tTTX.•' TaTtgETTT?ITTT!r^?TI7TTCTTrtT!gt!CE!!S >000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000(500 IPhone 799 Phone 799 | Service, Quality and Quantity 1 Guaranteed j Don’t wait until you bum your last || lump to buy. Buy now. j Cline & Mabery Coal Co. I PHONE 799 !b HOT WATER IN A JIFFY j 3 "yl This £ as hot water heatef - Tr is surely a friend in-need and pffiF | a friend of every cook U IPI match atid in a few minutes Pays for itself quickly. EB. GRADY PLUMBING AND HEATING DEALER Office and Show Room 39 E. Corbin St. Office Phone 334 W looodbobooooooooooooooooc AEROPLANES For the Kiddies 1IX• > j I J I A Barrel of Fun ] ; 35c Each j j 1 Cline’s i Pharmacy juuLfij.l Ph°n«Mß •, • I 111 ■ a.—i OUR PENNY ADS. ALWAYS GET RESULTS Friday. Novefnber 6 lws ; SATURDAY SPECIAL ! Mahogany clocscs„ 8-daty, | half-hour strike at $6.95 each ' These clocks sell regularly at from SIO.OO to $12.50 each. | Our Price Saturday Jg gg S. W. Preslar 7 * JEWELER \
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 6, 1925, edition 1
8
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