Monday, Nov. ±3, 1525 I SUCIRTV I Corals and Pearls These earrings combine coral and pegrls In a most pleasing manner. The chain and framework are at pearls, and the center atone ts a , lovely coral. Coral Is an exceedingly desirable stone this year, alone and , in combination with othpr stones. FEDERATION MEETING Will Held One Month Early on Account of Social Activities During the Yutetide. Tjio Federation of county women is called to meet in the Y at Con cord Saturday, November 28th at 2 o’clock. Chief among the afternoon's work at the meeting will be an address by Dr. T. N. Spencer, on (he “Need of a County Market in Concord and How to Make It Successful." All realize the need of a county njprket. Now the problem is to make this market successful. The live speaker who will give something good and helpful to the women is well known by his mfcccssep at the Cabar rus Fair, as well as by bis personal achievement. It is hoped all the women of the county will be present and each mem ber bring another. It has been one year sinyi the or ganization of the Federation, which ip proving very helpful id solving the county problems. > Election of officers will be a fea .turd of Saturday’s business. Also a table setting demonstration and pro frarn by the committee in charge. Remember the hour, 2 o’clock. Sat-1 urday. November 28. Place, Concord] Y, The women of the city are also! invited to the meeting. MRS. J>. 11. CASTOR, *’ President. MRS. C. S. McCl RDY, x , See. & Treas. Sport devotees can now travel by electric railway to Kiruna, situated in Lapin nd, a considerable distance north of the Altaic circles, n place already famed throughout northern Europe as a center for skiing, skat ing mid other winter sports. The twenty-second annual midwint-1 er golf tournament at Pineliunrt, N. j C., wilj be held this year during the | Christmas holidays. CROUP Fpr Spasmodic Croup rub Vicks over the throat tod chest until the' difficult breathing is relieved— then cover with a warm flannel doth. X/ICKS WVapqßu* .* . ” j ' 4 1 B • ~ h| 'Y fcespeci | Bold By ' rasss'ssuir . ’ 1 ’ par Kboae MO NlgM Pfaoaw MO-IML ■ ' if PERSONALS W. R. Odell and’ J. B. Sherrill, will leave tomorrow for Durham, and attend the meeting of the Board of Trustees of Duke University Wed nesday. e • e Mrs. R. L. McConnell and children, Tom and Jane, have rbturnej to their home in Montgomery, Ala., after vis iting relatives here for several weeks. Adam Klutta (returned -today t f> Tabor after spending the week-end in the city with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. G., S. Kl'uttz. I• * - Mr. and Mrs. J. It. Sherrill spent Sunday afternoon in Charlotte with Dr. and Mrs. J. O. Montgomery. • • • Mrs. W. C. J. Caton has gone to Richmond where she will visit her 1 daughter, Mrs. Marshall Mabry, for several weeks. • • • Mies Grace Royster has returned from High Point where she alient ,Sunday visiting relatives. ... U. A. Drown and sons. L»_A. Jr., and Clarkson, stopped in the city Hat- 1 urday afternoon for a, shert while en route to the Gnstonla-AYiiiston foot ball game In Salisbury. John and Rufus Brown, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Brown, accompanied, them to Salisbury. • » Mrs. \V. H. Gibson bus returned from Baltimore, where she spent sev eral weeks visiting relatives. She was accompanied home by her mother, Mrs. Oordou_Urimes. Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Massey and daughter. Marion, Mies Ruth and Miss Mattie Lee McCain, all of Wax haw, spent Sunday Inlhe city as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Ren net. • * * Rev. W. A. Jenkins, of Greensboro, was in the city for a short while-Ao day. • * * Mrs. Mae Furr, who Ims been visit ing relatives here for several weeks, luts returned to her home in Trout man. PAVLEY DANCERS ARRIVE IN CONCORD TUESDAY Number cf Stare Hands Required For Porfermam-t.—Local People ild>- En tertain Troupe. The l’avley-Oukrainsky Ballet will arfVye in tli«* city tomorrow afternoon at 3:53 o'clock, according to a nies aifge received this morning by H. \Y. Blanks, who bus churge of the ar- J rangements for the Dancers who will i perform hoTV Tuesday evening at the high school auditorium. Some iilea of the mngnitude of the performance cun he. gathered from the fact that they are asking that arrange ments be made to have two twenty foot wagons at. the station ready to haul the bugguge and scenery. Stag' hands required for tjie per formance are a head carpenter and four men, u beud electrician and two men. a head property man and two clearer.-. A nuihbcr of the people of thV community an 1 being asked to take care of the entertainment of the I troupe during their stay in the city, i Tickets are still almost one-half j unsold und indications are at present ; that unless there is a last minute rush, the guarantors in the city will have tO make good the amount neces sary to secure the l’avley-Ouknnnsky Ballet. DR. RANKIN TO SPEAK HERE THIS EVENING Will Talk at Maas Meeting in Court. house on How Money May Be Se cured From Duke Foundation. Dr. W. H. Rankin will be in the city this evening to make his address at the courthouse at 7 o’clock on the subject of the new hospital. All cit- I izens #ro asked to be present and lend their support in the movcipout. Dr. liatikifi is expected to talk on bow the opmity may secure money from tile Duke Foundation to assist in the construction and maintenance of the hospital here. He is expected to arrive in the city this afternoon-- I and will spend the night with li’is brother, Dr. R. B. Rankin, on Church street. ' ! All citizens of the city and county are asked to be present nml hear Dr. Rankin, according to the committee which has secured him. Death of Mrs. Susan C- Furr. 1 Mrs. Susan <’. Furr died at her home last Friday. N’ovemlier 20, 1025. Her death was not unexiiectcd. Since August 10, 1025 she was confined to her bed. . The deceased wa-' born February l!t. 1843, being 82 years, t) months and 2 days of age. She was married to Israel Furr in September 1805. To this uuiou were boru s« children, five boys aod one girl, three of v.hoir. pre - ceded her to the grave. Fifteen griinik children and three great grandchildren afts sUrv ve. The surviving children qre: Madison. Jason and L :w ; s Furr. A large number of relatives un.l friends also survive. j Mrs. Furr was loved ’by all who knew her. She was loved for her kind and sweet dispositions toward her chil dren and friends. She will be great ly missed in her community. Funeral services were conducted by her pastor. Rev. E. K. Counts, frum St. Martin E. L. Church, Saturday morniug at 11 o’clock and interment was made In the cemetery Inside her husband. A FRIEND. Restaurant Manager (to orchestra conductor) —"I wish, you’d display a little more tact in choosing the mu sic, We’ve got the National Associa tion of Umbrella Manufacturers here this cvouiiigf and you’ve -just-plnyed, ‘lt Ain’t Goiiii Haiti No More’!” A member of the Cortland, Ore gon, -lire department recently con fessed to kind Hug thirty-eight fires, and approximate loss of property was *IOO,OOO- , WILKES COUNTY YOUTH CAPTURED WITH LIQUOR Fifty Gallons and Hudson Car Taken When Officers Give (Base.—Smoke Screen Used. As a result of an exciting chase for a distance of over six miles this morning shortly after 7 o’clock, Claud j Hampton, 21-year-old Wilkes County | youth, is lodged in the Cabarrus . County jail, charged with transport ing spirituous liquors. The boy made use of every coneciy , able weapon in his effort to escape r the revenue officers, driving his Hud - son Brougham at a break-ueekv speed, . taking gambler's chances in rounding curves and using the latest appliance j for throwing off pursuit—a smoke • screen. • Despite all these efforts on hi* part, he was captured on the old 1 1 Charlotte-Concord highway, a short J distance from the Fair Grounds by two Rowan County Federal officers, L. D. Trexler and W. R. DeMareus. ,D. R. Wideuhouse and-J. L. Moore, r who started, in the pursuit, lost track r of the man after he rounded the Locke Mill corncr N and were not present at tlic time of his capture. 1 A total of fifty gallons was taken t from the automobile and was poured out before a thirsty audience at the court house. The automobile was con ’ fiscated. > ” According to evidence brought out 1 in the hearing this morning before U. J S. Marshall 0. lid. Kcstler, Mr. Wid -1 enhouse received a tip from Wilkes ’ boro at au early hour today that the ’ car was coming through this city. He secured Mr. Moore tu accompany him ] and called the two Rowan County men . to assfct. A , The four of them waited at Cook's Crossing at the place where the short detour begins. Mr. Wideuhouse was to give the signal when the man arriv i ed. When the Hmlxou liove in viejy 1 at the ritilroad crossing, Mr. Widen - house called for him to stop. Yoiiug : Hampton did not take the sigual in - the way 1 intended but instead stepped on the gas. At the-signal from Mr. Wideuhouse, Mr. Trexler and Mr. De - Marcus dashed after him. C . When the city was, reached. Hamp ton turned at the Locke Mill and shot down Buffalo street to Kerr aud from thence into Depot street,and \ on the overhead bridge and up tile Bill past the fair grounds. As soon as he discovered that lie was being followed, Hampton opened up his smoke barrage. He Bad a very clever contrivance in which lie , pumped oil from a ean at the foot of the ear in his manifold und then out through the exhaust. The two men follow’ng Were almost stifled on sev eral oeeasions. The cloud of smoke was so dense at one or two periods of the chase that they were almost thrown off the road. Hampton was being pursued so closely all the time, however, that lie eonkl not give it sufficient attention ami tile result was that Trexler and DeMareus kept close enough so that they could follow his automobile. A speed us between sixty and seventy , miles an hour was maintained con stantly oil straight roads. At the overhead bridge, the smoke almost sent the two officers off the bridge. *o heavy had it become. On the hill at the Brown Mill, the offi cers bumped into Irin, thinking that . thfif would make him stop. He kept on. however. DeMareus, who was > not driving, then began shooting at his tires and it was only after he had blown out two of them, that they were able to stop Hampton. The boy was brought to Concord and was placed in the county jail. At . a hearing, he maintained a calm and casual attitude toward the proceed ings and when asked if he could fur nish a bond of *I,OOO, lie replied that lie "guessed he could.” He was , bound over until the next term of Federal Court in Charlotte. Yoiiug Hampton und his family are • well known to officers here. They live at Rimly Gap, in Wilkes County. His father, according to Mr. Widcn house, served a two-year sent cnee on ■ the Cabarrus County roads lifter lie was caught With 100 gallons of liquor I here. A large crowd of persons gathered i ground the confiscated automobile when it was brought in this morning and many of tile people examined the > smoke screen and the liquor. When I it was tuken to the side of the court f house, where it was poured out, the ( crowd again s'tood round showing i great Interest in the proceedings. Remarks which were made by the spectators indicated* 1 that there was . more than the usual thirst, -several of “ the colored race beggiug that they be left a taste, "just to see how it goes.” ' Tango May Be last Gasp in Rhythm , But Visitors Shun It. l’aris, Nov. 23 — i/P) —Dancing mus i lers, and especially dancing mistress es, have decreed that tlie tango must be daliced; that it is the last gasp i in rhythm and the poesy of motion. I But the decrees are lost on meet of i tlie visitors to l’aris. Even French - men decline if. Spaniards und South Americans , muke a majority of the dancers in - fashionable chibs and cases when tlie - tangc comes on. This is especially true at afternoon dunces, when most -of tlie participants are not in formal dress. Street clothes,and the tango - do not go well together, uml it can- I not be done at all in Oxford bags. One American girl who refused tlie - tango at a tea party laughingly apol ogized :“I have given it up. I have decided that it Could only be danced i with some man one is desperately in • love with and should be done on a secluded veraudnb in tlie mooutJiglit. • It Is too bard to stage it properly.” Flowers Were Easy Then. i “Before we were married you sent around a dozen roses nearly every Saturday,” reproached the bride ’of six months. > "Yes but a,dozen roses was a cinch then ’as compared with a ton of/ coni Ujid a ril) roast or chicken every Sat urday night now.” wus hubby’s heart - less comeback. Chattel Mortgage Blanks, I for 1 cents, or 20c a dozen, at Tribune- Times Office. ts. .THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE An Occasional Column By MILES WOLFF I fear for my prestige as a sports ' writer. With that omniscience given only to scribes in this line of endeavor, it has been my custom each Thursday to dope out the jvinners and the losers among the various football elevens and then bublislp my very unique finding in Friday’s Tribune. Thus readers of this incomparable daily are given inspired utterances which they, could get in no other newspaper. During the greater part of tbe sea son, the plan has worked admirably. On several occasions, I have really done remarkably well, with only a minimum number of mistakes. Doubt- ] ful ca'ses afforded an excellent oppor- ' tunity for straddling the fence, so that all went well until last week. I’erhaps success hud gone to my head. At any rate. 1 declared with fervor after my Thursday afternoon ecu nee with the schedule of games for the week-end, that all the North Car olina squads engaged in combat on Friday and Saturday would lose. Or rather I declared that tlie major teams —State, Duke and Wake Forest, would take a Bubble. Alas for hitman frail- Jties. Two of the three teams I had ' been certain would fall, triumphed ov er their opponents, leaving my prophe sy high und dry. Friends, who have condoled with me stpcp the game- were played, have gently but insinuatingly suggested that I pick Virginia as a winner ill the Carolina-Virginia classic. They | are Carolina supporters. They seem - to be of tlie opinion that this is all tlint- is necessary to secure a victory for the Tar Heels. One man in the Times-Trlbune office. I shall not give his name, made a veiled threat about wliat he would do if I didn't predict David.-ou tii win over Duke in their impending clash. However, tile worst blow came in tliis morning's mail when I received a letter iu which a person who sign ed his name ns “Vox I'opull," stated Mint be was casting his vote for nu ns captain of the All-American team of sports writers. Although flattered at first, I was indiguaiit to discover in tlie closing paragraph of his epis tle that he had placed me on his-All- American team of Atrocious Dicker and Worst Writers. I shall stop picking winners—that : Is. after Thanksgiving, lu the mean time, . don't you think Carolina will beat Virginia? IMPRESSIONS M A Cotton Mill Black slippery floors Steel machines Roars and Roars . . . A monster in agony groauiug Moaning Whirring Burring Great globs of color Masse- es roseate sunset And purple dawns Insatiable greed of machines That must be fed Yellow, blue and red Youth and Power ill shifting seems I Romance and Cruelty. The Cotton Mill. SYLVIA NORMAN. Hugh Walpole's latest novel, ' I’o-- truit of u Man with Red Hair," was not nearly so interesting to me as wnJ~ his book. "The Old Ladies.'” At the same time, 1 shall have to admit jhat it is among the better of the volumes I have recently read. To begin with, be is too slow in get ting started. For almost a hundred : pages, he is preparing the reader for.. events which arc to follow. Much of this opening is description, which is fatal in almost any modern novel. After he does get started, however, he holds attention with a most unusual sequence of happenings. Ou'e thrill ing incident after another occurs to | Churles Percy Darkness (the hero of tbe book). The story is only concniir ed with the happenings of one nighty in the hero's life but they are -noli that they change his character to a - degree. All element of mystery in the book adds to the suspense, which makes it ' comparable to Mary Roberts ktine liardt's "Rod Lamp." Os the two. tlie. i latter was to me the more interesting. However, Walpole’s book’ is belter written and should be reud by anyone ' who keeps up with modern fiction. One description, typical of the beauty of his writing, is quoted here: “What he immediately confronted ; was the garden of the hotel. The sun was slowly setting in the wesl,|'j and great amber clouds, spreading out f in swathes of colour, attyup the blue. "The amber flung out firms us though it would embrace the .whole world. Tip 4 deep blfie ebbed from sea, was pale crystal, then from length to length u vast bronze shield. The amber receded as though it Imd done its work, and myriads of lit tie flecks of gold tnu up into the pule blue-white, thousands of scattered fragments like, coins fluhg in some God-like largeness.” Mail Order Sales Indicate Home Bar hiring on Increase. Chicago. Noe,. 23, —(&)—Barboring nt home appears to be on the Increase in the United States. • The desire of women with bobbed locks to keep tin backs of their necks neatly trimmed is largely rxponsible for it. Throe of tlie largest mail order houses here report increases of fioni 35 to 75 per cent in' the sale of hair clipper during tlio lust year mid a half. Not only does bobbed iiair style de mand close neck trims and shaves’ but mothers and' fathers have taken to clipping the hair of their children. There Ims been no fear expressed, hoii-ever. that the barber shop will ever be supplanted by the parlor barbers. > '< f i‘i'j ; * 5 Take a Chftnee. Mrs. Newlywed : “This married lifev is terrible." • Her Friend ; "What now ?” Mrs. Newlywed: "‘Jack said 1)o' wanted "his eggs fried on 'one side, and be didn’t tell which side.” > Protector JP | is P ||l|gfc|r'*' m _ ~ 'arl Wolfe of notgers College is the >est dropklcker on the fooiba-H iquad, but is so near-sighted he can lot see 10 feet away without glasses. But with glasses he couldn't take ; (art in scrimmage, so Cbach Jack tVallace solved the problem by hav ng a cage prepared for him. Photo hows Wolfe with the cage on. ready | to display his stuff. LAST SI NDAV SCHOOL INSTITUTE FOR COUNT* Institute For Townships Nos. C and 7 Held Sunday at Prosperity Chureh. Officials of the County Sunday School Association have completed their Sunday School Institute work for the year, the last institute being held yesterday afternoon at I’rosper- Wednesday-Thursday dgjflr Imb4. Hr f Rt- s . * f * . * •sß| K:X'%::--'X ’• ' -1 Nc V s • ' ■: u: 1 J Added Attraction Extraordi nary Frances Burr Mitchell of Boston. Mass. Dramatic Soprano Late Soloist With Boston Sym phony Miss Mitchell's voice is a de lightful treat to music lovers. The quality and color of her voice is rare. As a singer of classic ballads she has few peers. ( Miss Mitchell's studies in Europe were under Isidor Braggiotti, who has pronounc ed Miss Mitchell as the coming Earrar. This theatre has secured Miss Mitchell for two days on ly Wednesday and Thursday. AUDITORIUM IT 26] CHARLOTTE,THANKSGIVING DAY—MATINEE AND NIGHT THE WORLD’S GREATEST SHOW George White’s > Scandals [ OVERSHADOWS ANY REVUE EVER PRODUCED COMPANY OK IMF— FAMOUS BEAUTY CHORUS : .:! CARLOADS GORGEOUS EFFECTS ; Night ( $1.JJ5.52120, '.52.75, ' - ji " •!' ’ ' $3.301 -Mail Orders to Matinee sl.lO, $1.65. $2.20 Gordon Music Ac - adcm >’ Regular Sale at Efird’s Dept. Store Monday, November 23 j AC" •. ' . ■ ■ .r A-rJI ity-'Church, Rimer, for townships No. , 6 and 7. Institutes have now been held in ev- ] ery township iu the county except No. ( la, which embraces the Churches of i Concord. This institute is always J held under the direction of the State i Sunday School Association and its 1 date and meeting place will be an-i] uounced late. Vice President John J. Barnhardt, I Miss Eugenia Lore, superintendent of the children's division, and Prof. J. j J It. Robertson, superintendent of the administrative division of the county i association, conducted the institute,] held yesterday at Prosperity Church, ji Officials of the county association j declare attendance at the institutes) throughout the county has been excel-] lent this year with marked interest I j shown at each meeting. Cabarrus county for several years j j lius been one of the 100 per cent, coun-j J ties in Sunday School work and toil attain this standard the State Asso-lj elation requires the holding of town- | ship institutes. Thus the local asso- j elation is started, right on a program calculated to place the county in the) “Blue Ribbon” class again this year. I ..... 11. I ' II .i ] By Day and By Night The Smartest Women Demand jj Perfume D’Orsay Sold Only By I J J jj Gibson Drug Store j The Rexall Store j: Raw Meat-r- !; Never | ’'Ladies, feed you* husbands V j fi raw meat and see how husky ji, l they get. it may not improve nj s | | their gentle natures, but prize J? ’ 1 i fighters earn good money.” X . 1 This is what Prof. Hichert of i [ ? , the French Academy of Sei- Ji \ i ernes might be expected to ad- <[ t | vise solVitons young wives, y ? i Prof. Krrliert inclines to the { \[ . i 1 theory that raw meat is man's ~i| • \ \ Ideal food, and \v</ agree that it Q 0 i probably was in the stone age. X * 1 With the knowledge of fire X building, came the practice of |i ; J 1 hqWing Hm* cut of meat on a Q ( | | stick over tin* flame, and later Ji j i i.t was simmered in an open ves- j||, j A There’s nothing very tempting ji ,( J about a sirloin steak when it’s jl, j 8 raw and eokl and flabby. But i [\ i broil that steak under the gas , ® flame, (bust with salt and pep- ij T; per, let a chunk of melting but- 1 © ter mingle with the savory ]|j juices and it’s food "fit for man I ijj or god.” I® Xo siree, while we’ve got a good gas range in the kitchen, ]l||i well take our meat browned to iv 1 a turn! Concord & Kannapolis Gas Co. “If It’s Done With Heat, i i ] You Can Do It Better ij! ] With Gas” ooootooooooooooooooooooo . Whatever You Need in *1 I [ V. There is one Address to 1 WSfc)/ sJJ Remember This Week!'; * , 'iiit—ii" can 1 and more richness i > ric than you can see in i 5 these Roberts-Wicks suits 1 ij t and no one will even try.J X If it s an O coat —where can you find more protection I | from the blizzard in cloth and relief frc»m the Blaze- in I O s a jjat and if you choose a Knox now—you’ll choose 1 0 this store again for your Straw Hat next summer. 1 j] II it's a Shirt —or Underwear—or Neckwear—or Hosiery I —and if it’s for Thanksgiving—and if you want to be 1 X tru, y thankful next Thursday— next month— next year I i]i come to Brown’s and talk Turkey! C ijj Roberts-Wkks Suits $30.00 to $45.00 I X Roberts-Wicks Overcoats i. $25.00 to $40.00 1 X Superior Union Suits $2.00 to SS.OP 1 ,]U Knox Hats - $7.00 to SB.OO J | Browns-Cannon Co. j Where You Get Your Money’s Worth £ j I j ■’Ajß CANNON BUILDING 5 Galvanized Roofing {. w< I w , I Another Car at the Old Price r I "J We handle 2!) gauge llefvy Weight only. TB? I P rice is $4.75 per square, including nails and washers.. | I In 6, T. 8,9, 10 and 12 foot lengths. I i : Yorke & Wadsworth Co. •. , I I THE OLD RELIABLE HARDWARE STOREm, 10000000000000000000000000000000000000000000009 WHY A LOT OF PEOPLE j ' Have Quit Shopping For Tires The tire you want is here for you. . 1 Come in and let us help you choose it from the com plete Goodyear line we carry— Every type and size from the good old Goodyear 30x3 1-2 Clincher to tWc. new SUPERTWIST Goodyear Balloon—and you name the price you want to pay. ; | Yorke & Wadsworth Co >.jj Urtlon arid Church Streets M i 1 f The Old Reliable Hardware Store | Phone 30 Phone 30 PAGE FIVE

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