Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Nov. 21, 1925, edition 1 / Page 7
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patunigyi Nov.lf, ms A Mon in I Professions I 1 _ \ a Methods scientifically ■ approved and hygienic ■ processes of dry cleaning ■ combine to meet your ex ■pectation When refreshed Bob’s. I t is worth ■your patronage regularly, ■tor well-being and com ■fort is necessary to your ■best effort. MASTER GLEANERS Phone 787 s "‘ indsomely Engraved Visiting cards, 100 for fro* $2 3& to $4.00, includ ing plate. Fronf old plate, $1.50. per 100. , Times-Tribtine office, ts. 8E PENNY COII'MN—IT PAYS OUT OUft WAY Bt WlLLlAjyi**' SSSTtM ABSORBED /X j/BSBB' / / fi \ '1 The merger t - •■••••>?,. , , 7 - -■■ ■ ?•*' J MOarN POP / - BY TATI AW ‘ " H£NR> I -DOMT BEUEVE. 'Wf £VE WdnCEDlftE f / I'LL PLACE IfilS PlCTUfiLfe O? HER .T’ I LORETTA CARES AS MUCH 6AMEIhIN6ANO ( TbRMER SWEETHEART Oil' The MA*iJt£ So ) 1 R)R GHtfiK AS WE THOUGHT- J JJM fiOHOQ Tb Tfev 4 CHICK ttM SEE IT WHfcO THEY RSTORN S SHE’S BEEN TfcWWBLV J OVSTAUTtLE ZJ FROM THE TftEATRE -NWE'LL WATCH / OP6ET9MCE SHE SCTT JM SCHEMEI) ItST AMD SEE WHAT EFFECT IT HAS JH her LOVE AMD fifeo nj\: ==c_ X *)eROLO 9wegrnEAßT/ffl out which wav Lfl .Jr —v /Ihurrv- ; I I . ' TTO? 'fl/HtfS.'TflE <SUY ) / OH-A^r^pßpN/^W 1 IThOuaiff MASBC )Y OHNBU JfifcLOUS V (ittlrn - who else y Itl Hi (p^l—|\MlME jd Y? J ' COI^THERE, ee/ M3l Oft TB i v .* ' > " Tim light in a pipe will show you the way through -more things than getting lit yourself will. The best reflections route frttm thinking instead of looking into mir rors. Skirts were' shortened because the women bated fs' have thtnl brush ggainst gossips. A gentleman will not cuss before Indies, not even when the ladies are too drunk to bear him.. Tou have to cultivate good habitsr The bad ones grow wild. Government is. U gamble. And in foreign-countries now, the king is not a« high us the jack. * (Copyright, 1028. NEA Service. Inc.) TO TAKE BODY TO CAIRO | Alter Final Examination It Will Be Returned to Tomb. Special. Die pitch to Jifw York Wpdd.i Ctlfro, Nov. 211—-Tot-ankh-omen’s 1 body in its gold ipfler coffin will be! tiicvgtl to Cairo shortly, according to plans made now. It had been in tended to leave the boy king in his tomb and Wifi probably ultitnatfl.v be rttnfrrred there. But! the difficulty of removing the body! froth the gold coffin and the inad-’ Vlsability of leaving such an object I even well guarded ip its desert ne- j eropolls has (letermuied its guardians to bring it to Calfo for the final i stages anrf Investigation. Some of’ the Egyittian officials who were in vited to witness the examination of ■the body hgve returned to Cairo. Official communiques are doling out the in driblets, reserving the de scription of Tut's crown for the I last. My dispatches of last week regard- I ing the sensational nature of the finds j are now confirmed. _ The sgven- layers of-jewelry ia which the king was eucrusted constitute the ireateot artistic jewel treasure in the world entirely apart from its histor ical interest. The greatest work of aH - the best goldsmiths and lapidaries «f one of t’je supreme periods of art have been found heaped-- around the body of one boy. No such master pieces exist anywhere elite in the world, according tp the belief cf How ard Carter, and bis associates. rrr — C LOTH ING WORKERS HIT BOSSES IN RIOT ■ - Thirty Men and WPftan Wrafc Coat Factory.—Seven Held For Felon ious Assault. New York World. ... • I Brandishing knives, flat-irons and Fa three-font iron bar, thirty clothing workers, both men' and women, in vaded the premises of the Well- Known Coat Compahy. on the Wurth floor of No. 140. Whst 22nd Street, | shortly after 1 o'clock yesterday, smashed windows and machinery and s'asbed clothing and electric wires. Harry Dodowiteh, one of the own- I ers, was struck over the rlghUearn; p bis partner, David Rtrbtn, received a I blow on the right ar*, and Morris | Grossman, an employee, suffered a 1 lacerated hand. Police armted seven | persons v ' Rlvbi Cnion Factions Battle in the Tiie 200 employees of the clothing factory of Indyck and Goldberg, No. [ 204 Wallabout Street, Brooklyn, en ! Raged in a free-foMll fight oi) the ■ street in front of the factory yfester | day morning while mdse than 1,000 j persons looked, on. Pffiiee reserves from the Clymcr Street' sthtimi-, with j d-rawn pistols, dfepersetl. tlie fighters and made six "arrests:' Two partici pants received stabii and one police man was cut and bruised^ The fight grew -out cf- a quafrel between the right and left groups'in the union. . | The American Women's C'ttbs of- J’aris, Prance, is' planning' an elabo rate American fair for November 24, -i. . , ■ fttft tOKCQkb DAILY' TRIBUNfe ** II L I Washington. Dec. 20.—President ' Coolidge one of whose main ambitious as everybody knows, is to rid govern ment of every- bareati, division, com mission and board it can possibly do without, and to consolidate the rest, got a lot of valuable tips from Count Guiseppe Volpi di Misurata while the Italian debt settlement negotiations were going on here. I As Premier Mussolini's minister of | finance, the count took a leading part in boiling the Rome government down to a fraction the s : ze of the unwieldy thing the fascist chieftain found on his hands when he proclaimed his- dicta torship. j - It was just the story tg fall like Music on the thrifty presidential ear. Some say that, from the minute hF heard it, the national executive favor ed giving the .Italians better terms. But that’s a jdfee. * * * v- I At any sate, self-contained as he usually is, all accounts agree that he glowed with interest and admiration j as Volpi described; through gn iuter- the-thorough ne.-s of Mussolini's job. MptS that/50 bureaus were abolish ed in three years, personnel, offices, ■duties and all. ' Matty others were mehged. TThe economy amounted to millions and the government, the couttt said,- is. more efficiently adm'n istered today than ever before. Of’ course this is the fascist version. Volpi being one. Evidently others dispute ft, ; or Mussolini’s assassination would ■not have'beert ittenipted a few days, ago. ' Senator Smoot one of the American debt negotiators, is quoted as wonder ing why the Italan premier hasn't done anything toward consolidating' sbtte of Finance Minister Count Gui *pjie Volpi di Misureta’s bather num erous titles and names. Weaver college gets Dt'KE GIFT OF SSO 000 Is Condi tjptted I’pon Institution's Friends Raising a Siml’ar Amount. A'betnarib, Nov. 20 —Rev, C. M Pickens; hf Albemarle, president of the a umni association of Weaver located at Weavervjlle, an tir tinced today that Benjamin N. Duke, of New’York, has made n do nation of $5|),000 to Weaver College, wfiftn cionatfon, however, condi tioned, upon the trustees, aiuinni as seciatibn and friends of the college securing and donating a like amoutit to the college t The news wi'l be received with grcaj p!ensure by t’ae many friends of. this college' throughout the state -Weaver- College is a jmilof coUege dnd belongs to the -western North Carolina fibitfynettfe of tjie Methodist Episcopal ('knreh. South. It was fynmleu hi 4k74 and has been sue eesßfui, fftnrthe oiftset. Dr. C. H •jtep#Rdg«**3Ht* president aml it Is itWJMWtomF libat there are now about 1 200 Htudeuts as the institution. Mr. Piffim'bs Hub takeii a special interest in#!iie institution for tiie reason ■that his father .je one of the founders, of the college. Weaver Coßege is lbcated not. far from Asheville.' rr Hotel Manager Goes* to New Loca tion. Charlotte, XoV. at.—John X. Hoff man, acting uianuger of the Hotel Charlotte for the past three months, Kueecyeding O. W. DonnelU, why went to the Washington Duke in Durham will take chaige of the George Van derbilt Hotel in Asheville within the next few days. Wit'h this transirr comes the an nouncement that E. A. Kolph, gen eral manager of the Four and Rob inson hotel}:. Will move from High Point to ChaHotte, establishing ilis headquarters here for the system, and will be manager o fit he Hotel Char lotte, with an assistant, or resident manager, in direct charge of the ho- ■ tel. "Dad wlmt- does ‘diplomatic pimse ology' meai." "My son, if you tell aa girl that time stand*, still when you gasse into her. eyes, tliat’s diplomacy. But if you tell her that her face would stop a clock; yori'ru in for it.” The native Hawaiiau rat is now extinct save for one small colony on a little island off the north s'hore of Oahu. Let You? | Next Battery || I Be An EXIDE \ Use Only the | . Best v ~ —r- „ „. L i Concord, North Carolina J IMO POPULATION 9,910. (FED EKAL CENSUS FIGURES 1»|0). Presemt Estimate 18,7930 ASSESSED VALUATION of City 1 •of Cottcuid, #12.604,211. | ASSESSED VALUATION of C»- j bai-ni* County, s3»jgUa,«6C. VALI EOF CRON, $4,424,758. ' CfTT AND SUBURBAN ESTI MATE 15,000. NATIVE WHITES 80 PER CENT; NEGROES, 80 PER CENT; Industrial Workers 60 per cent; Eng lish Reading 100 .pet- cent. SfcrfoOLS: ’ Public ' Graded, 4 ; High 1; Number of Pupils 2,500; Woman’s College (Negro) 1. CHURCHES: Baptist, 8; Luther an, 5; Episcopal, 1; Methodist 8;: Presbyterian, 4; Miscellaneous, 6.' | - BANKS: National,- 1; State, 2; Total Resources, #7,250,306.49; Sav-, ings Bank Deposits ToUl $4,837,257,-1 22. | THEATRES: Moving Pictures, 3; Miscelianeous' (Auditoriums, etc.) 1. ■ LOCATION: In.' the center of Cs barras County hi the southern part of the State, on the' main line of the Southern Railway. Excellent |Ms Ser vice ip all parts of tbe State and South Carolina. Cabatrtts Couhtjt has population of 85,080. v Principal industries: The manufacture of cotton goods and hos iery. Annual pay rolls are considera bly more than $3,000,000. Largest towel mill in the world, is located at Kannapolis, only six miles from Con .cord. MANUFACTURING ESTAB LISHMENTS: 50. Leading Cannon Mills, Gibson Mfg. Co., Kerr Bteadbins & Finding Works: Locke Cotton ■ Mills, Brown Mill, Hoover Hosiery Company, Hartscli Mills Co., National Lumber Co.; Norcott Mills, WWte-Parks Mill. Total value Os yearly output of factories, estimated at $40,000,000. • y < SPECIAL INFORMATION: A big _-a. BMs.ua.a-' Poor Man, He Must Eat 3+ JO Units Whilt His Wit, Can Sfop T '***-■ don't tf'ou ialTc i 6 me at meal ' Uewliiu'cd—"Hdw can I, dearie, when I have to cat 600 mm ' ealoriet than you!” • CHlCAGO—Females of the Species may be more deadly than the males but -they don’t eat so inuch. “Men are by far the heevi?: eat ers,” declared Herbert C. Hooks, secretary of the Evaporated Milk Association, in an address here “The average man consumes 20 percent more food than the aver age woman. Even among men i and women dcing physical work a I •urvey disclosed that the men re quired 3,000 calories a day while needed oply 2,831 ealories. “Women require less food than men because their bodies are rela tively richer In fat and ooorer in jnuscle. Men do more manual la- — ' ■■ 1 i , EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO V '' ? v • * - • » t industrial center, situated in the cen-' ter of a splendid famine country, with , direct ra iroad connections with the 1 North, South and West. Sixteen ' hours by rail from Nets York City,, ! ten hours from Washington, D. C.,. | seven hours from Atlanta, 6a. I RESIDENTIAL. FEATURES: Mostly one-family houses; limited sec tion devoted to workingmen's tene ments; private homed predominate; majority of private homes attractive, modern houses; number of wired jiouses 2,015; artificial gas; alternat ing electric current; soft water. RETAIL SHOPPING SECTION: Extends one block fiorth and three blocks south of the public squire on Union Street and Church street; one block easy and three blocks west on Depot street, Corbin street, Means j street and Barbrick street. There are I Beveral smaller neighborhood sections, yith the usual grreery, confectionery. , meat and small shops. . j TRADING AREA: Extends ten miles north, south, east and west, and is also a trading area for splendid country district. WHOLESALE HOUSES: Grocer ies, 4: Meats, 1; Fruits, 4; Miscel laneous Line 1. NUMBER OF RETAIL OUT LETS FOR NATIONALLY ADVER TISED PRODUCT: Passenger auth mobile agencies, 7: commercial ant agencies 2; automobile tire agencies. 4; automobile accessories, 10; bak ers, 1; cgiar stores , and stands (in cluding hotels) 8; confectioners (in cluding hotel stands) 8; dress makers. 6; druggists, 0; dry goods, 6; depart ment stores, 3 ; electrical supplies, 2: florist, 1; fruits, 3; furniture, 4; ga rages (public) 6; 'tgrocets, 47; haril ware, 3; jewelry. 4; meat markets, St men's furnishings, 9; men's clothing 9; milliners, 8; opticians. 2: phooig raphers, 3; pianos (and miscellaneous .musical instruments,) 2;’ radio sup plies, 2; restaurants (.including hotels)- 15; shoes, 8; spprtipg goods, 2; sta tioners, 4; women’s apparel, 2; med ical doctors 12; dentists, 7; osteo paths, 1; chiropractors, 1. more food, to supply, energy for tyork, to replace wear and tear on . toe muscles ana to build reserve strength. “Eating is perhaps the .most im portant thing a human being does , Careful attention to diet frequent ly spells the difference between good health and illness. Milk, na -1 time's most nearly perfect food should find an important place in every person’s diet since it con tains all of the important elements for building and maintaining the body. Because evaporatea milk ii more than twice as rich as ordi nary market milk, diie to the re moval of 60 percent of the water, more economical and convenient it has become, the reliance of mil lions of American families for all SHOES OF REFINEMENT Six New Styles This Wepk fcj • . , ;] FOR YOUR APPROVAL ‘ -7 / *•' l i Discard your shaffy shoes and get into a pair of these neat dressy **" new ones and get the benefit of a full season’s wear, they’re the pret tiest bits of footwear you have seen and the most stylish we have * ever shown. May we show them to you? I $3.95 to $9.00 4 J- IVEY’S j “THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES” FEEDS AND MORE FEEDS i j Chowder for your hens : ! ! Cow Chow for your cows i|,. Omolin for your horses and mules Pig Chow for your hogs • Hay and Straw, | _ We carry cro-eries of most anything to eat j-.' PHONE 122 CASH FEED STORE | WHERE QUALITY COUNTS We Want Your Thanksgiving Order i for Turkeys and Poultry a 1 i;: M e have several hundred Turkeys and Chickens and thev are » cheaper than Pork and HSef. Why not buy the IW2ST when the Best is cheaper tha i the rest? Tr,\ some of our Home Made Hauer Kraut, Fl< me Made Sorghum ••• r aud Home-made Liver Mush7 Live at Home and Trade at the “Old Home Town Store/’ . •> , C. H. BARRIER & CO. TBIT! E ,b.£.E iwt &tlßg£BSgEECT£3gtCgTrEgg V- 1-1 UJtSi J P-''' .. * rcrtOO<XX)OCKXKyXXX3COOeM3raXVXWVvv—>ew>rvS<— I . DELCO UGHT Light Plants and Batteries ; Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter ; | nating current and Washing Machines for Direct or Al- " ‘ ternating Current. R. H. OWEN, Agent I ! —Phone 669 Concord, N. C. * I<yK>O OOOOO<yXXXXX>OOOOOOCKyxy>r>< w >o< , vv^< w »< w^rKyKK>r>onoOfV> \ < , Mirrors Are So A New Venetian Crypt at Mtiror Decorative add / Charming Yet frij/m They Cost so Little H. B. WILKINSON Out of the High Rent District * j Concord, Kannapolis Mboresville China Grove | CYLINDER REBORING | I We have installed a Bottler Reboring machine so that wc can re- fi bore the cylinders of cars and tit ne\y pistons, rings and wrist pins $1 without removing the motor from the frame, thereby suving a large R ... labor charge. Just give us a trial and convince yourself. n We carry a full line of Goodrich Tires, Tubes, Piston R : ngs and I l ms, Uusco brake lining, Spurt on Horns, Prest-O-Lite Batteries J .... Whiz Auto Soup and Polish and'6cuuiao Ford Parts. y ::| • studkbaker sales and service _t 1 Auto Supply & Repair Co. 3. -. VitONE *23 PAGE SEVEN
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Nov. 21, 1925, edition 1
7
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