Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Dec. 3, 1925, edition 1 / Page 10
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PAGE TEN Knerican If I Legion Men A. E. F. Soldiers will recall how good it felt to change into a uniform that had been dry clean ed. It made of you a bet ter fighter. Good appenr ?■/. -ttnce today will not only £ strengthen you mentally, | but set you off as suc f cessful in the passing pa ll rade of busines. “Fall in” with your patronage for Bob’s. MASTER CLEANERS Phone 787 Handsomely t rigruvcil Visiting Cards, 1 100 for from $2.35 to $4.00, includ-l ing plate. From old plate, $1.50! per 100. Times-Tribune office. ts. | USE PENNY COLUMN’—IT PATS OUT OUR WAY BY WILLIAMS M||fE'O w - L ~ V-'iAME T&J? FINE } V . 9 A( \ . A HOLE tjL ■ ' 7 'rfj Ifi il jUta/b^r^ holed up? _ . ' ! mJ J y. n-3 ■ Br"T ' ft 1933 BV NEA SERVICE. INC. , MOM’N POP BY TAYLOR 0K VOHILE IYA6 SHOPPING V" \f T- OME RING IN PARTICULAR WAS A BEAUTIFUL 7§ OWN Today x met TVjo Girls \ > solitaire mounted in aplatinum setting (£Y »ERE BOTH WEARING LCNELY ) ( IT WAS THE MOST "THING 1 EIT. R H iEMENT RINGS -1 WAS SO J SAW -THE SIRL WAS SO fROLD OF IT TOO, VRASSED BECAUSE I DiDNT ~ 'A BECAUSE IT MEANT SO MUCH To HER : ONE * 1 Simply COULDN’T %> -V- “ r '^^pS§ i...—■ . /V' -I’M GOINS DOWNTOWN Y oh YOU LET'S SEE NOW- A RING WILL COST SSOO Wt If TOMORROW AND LOOK OVER J WONDERFUL |[ LEAST- m**J 4 '*? '7, U The SBVRXLERS -1 HOPE rt BOV- I CAN P 51225® R /(fii IA I CAN FIND SOMETHING ,y JUST IMAGINE M C ?****f’ Ilk THAT IS-AH- REALLY HCMIMAGNIFICENT fi US liv. SUITABLE Ly V ITW<U.BE Av/m. s. To RAY POP ♦ll7.Sa INFOUR MOhJTHS- /fflq B\ N -J* ImW SSE WHIZ'. IWISH ED NEVER jj/ ' 1 3 h«|V. ii'fTaMi miff MM M Hi -Mmrßv l> kSK ■ T P-A -I I n nWBBBa—IL 1 I: 11111 i W'tfMBBBMBKsz-’l .--■ - .*•” ■ r . ».-. tom ra» spistp oax§ .» I Hotel. bunie.l al night in Florida, but no doubt: it was warm enough for fleeing son nr 2 v elad. j Burglars tvlni got s.omo jewels in Tarr.vtowu, N. Y., didn't tarry. | A man wtap made .HI.T.tHKUKKI in | Wall Street, giss bis exercise running j up columns op figures. | They arrestt*! it famous swindler ■in Chicago, but he 'msn't sold the j judge any oil slock yet. i News from Tetris. Minister there I has married 8,(IK) couples. And he j is still at large. I Canadian imnfgration may be ro jat rioted. This bad. llow will Canada get the atnpry bottles back? (Copyright. 1325. "NEA Service. Inc.) I lack—l proposed to Grace last | week, and she ask»d me if 1 had any | prospects. llarry—>Vtiy didn't you tell her about your rich uncle? Jack—l did and now she is my aunc. Tn anelent Egypt it was; a custom to put on top of the eoflin a model of the head of the person who was buried in it. GOITRE GONE “In Three Days I Began to Get Re lief,” Says Mrs. l.inbardt.—A Mild I.inimcnt Did It. M rs. Chester I.inlmrdt, I.ewistown. I Md., says, “I feel my goitre is entirely j gone. Am feeling fine. I hope my j experience will be a benefit to many ! others.” j Sorbol-Quadruple can be obtained ] at most drug stores or write Sorbol Company. Meehaniesburg, Ohio. Lo cally at the Gibijon Drug Stove. M ‘LETTER %&j£l By CHARLES P. STEW'ART NEA Service Writi r Washington. IVe. 2.—Congress will open in a few days now. This is the (Wth. Senators and representa : fives are arriving fast. So are the | representatives of. numerous private, corporate and other interests, ivith axes to be ground. Hotel lobbies are filling up. The shutters of many a long-closed-up mansion, where some t one of the move affluent among the 1 national legislators makes his Wash ington home, are coming down. Rents | are being advanced. The capital is I awakening from i:s nine-months’ j t ranee. ‘ The arriving lawmakers bring news j from all parts of the country. It conflicts 'somewhat, according to the section from which the lawmaker who brings it comes, as well ae with his personal and political sympathies and prejudices. The various parties, groups and blocs have their plans for the winter pretty welll laid. From all this hodge-podge here are some of the impressions I get: : That the Republicans will try to make tax reduction the session's main business, not only for its own sake but to drown out other talk. That the Democrats will dispute the validity of Republican economy claims: that, they'll raise the tariff issue: that they think they've gained a bit of ground in recent months and will fight like wildcats for more. That t’be Senate radical group wiltl be a trifle shy of its previous strength. That tbe country is pretty pros perous in spots—not everywhere. That the farmers, though better off than they were, are not very well satisfied yet. That religious antagonisms /I THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE HV TBE DA TS tniEN TH$ BUSTLE WENT ASPORTim WHEN IT WAS | LAWN TENNIS-ISSO SIGNALLING Oft FURTINGM6BC, FCyHEN, oh when, were the day* W of real sport? Now you open the papers to taste a good monel of fighting gossip (when Dempsey really will fight Wills). Fifty years ago the newspapers frere scanned just.as eagerly for the •core of the American Rifie Team. Mr. 1925 spends a glorious Satur day afternoon yelling like an Igor tote because his baseball team is winning. Mr. 1875 rooted like a jolly cricketer—cricket, as a direct Import from England, being more genteel than baseball! You would—but a tour of the late seventies in the pictorial pageant ushering in the Ter-Centenary Ex hibit of New York at Wan sneaker's Is a revelation of the change in the world of sports. The whole story is Id pictures. When Babe Ruth hurts a batting ftnger, the world is concerned. But fifty years ago the doings of “crack shots” were the subjects of cable grams when Ireland and America competed for the international rifle championship. The Police Gazette amiably devoted its columns to the many boat clubs that vied with each other on the Harlem or Hudson throughout the country have about reached their peak and may be ex pected to decline in intensity hence forward. That the w ets recognize their time hasn’t come yet but are sure it will, while the drys feel certain it never will. That there will he a tremendous row over aviation. His Mistake. Two business friends who lived in the country met one day. and one invited the other to (line with him that evening. At Vile appointed time the guest set forth in the direction of his friend's house, and as the roads in the village were somewhat dimly lighted- lie took with him his old fashioned stableman's lantern. The dinner was. good, the wine ex cellent and all went merrily. The next morning, however, lie re ceived tile following note from his host of the night before: “Dear Om Man: I am sending mv man'over to yon with this note, and lie takes with him your lantern. If you have quite finished with my par rot and cage, I shall he awfully gald if you will lAturn same per bearer.” The record Christmas pie was made in 1770 for Sir Ilenry Grey, of Lon don. It measured three yards round, and weighed’3oß pounds. Tired After Eating? Try This Simple Mixture Ts you feel tired after eating, it is often a sign of gas and undigested matter in your stomach or bowels. Simple buckthorn hark, magnesium sulph, c. p., glycerine, etc., ns mixed in Adlerika. helps any case gas on the stomach, unless due to deep seated causes. The QUICK action will Surprise you. Adlerika is won derful for constipation—it often works in one hour and never gripes. Pearl Drug Company. Let Your | | i Next Battery ! Be An EXIDE 11 \ i Use Only the Best O * Rivers. Oh, rowing was decidedly the thing 1 . Then for tbe real aesthetics of siHirt, give a Y5-er the choice of archery or croquet. The insidious ness of the latter! It fascinated the •wild youth so, that they played far into the night. Mothers wondered what the world was coming to with this craze for croquet ! Archery was equally potent in bringing tbe two sexes together. One wonders bow many youths were stricken by Cupid’s darts in this subtle game. The adored damsel settled her bangs, stepped forward, lifted her arms to txiw and arrow displaying the curves of the Grecian bend—an artful mix ture of nature, stay* and a bustle! lawn tennis had Its first national tournament in 1880. The bustle followed the feminine ligure even on to tbe tennis court. Here’s a pretty question: would 11 elen WSb be tbe American cham pion If she Wore a breathless basque and had been forbidden by her mother to show one inch of white cotton stocking? Terrible, indeed, should anyone dream that limbs walked inside those voluminous skirts I He jerseys were considered shocking became they more than Unfortunate? Yes. But, Beggars? No OS' J'UNDAY S'Tff They only aak that you holp them to aavo thomaelvoa. EVERETT TRUE ~ BY CONDO j OOHOP, ntZ.TROe, ’HOUJ AgC N >2X) TO’DAY V 1 I'j> TAK6 'ftu To I ——-7 YOUNGi- V& ABOUT k r- AfZimr MOT* Foivty-Fivfts. flWLATigQhMattox of* NUST -How I TSARS —ITS ouv arclj— < NinS7 & ° f "ir (3 cm ''ftJU/R'e: Much too TOUMC to ©«- ku<sAirjN <Z goiter -s^r —— $ suggested the form. In the skating scene of the sixtiea the men dared the frost to nip their ears by wearing high silk hats when they executed fancy figures. Women glided over the ice in quaint fur lined pelisses that flared over buoy ant heaped skirts. They were real skaters, too. A modern expert de dares that many an exhibition figure of today was evolved by die old New Yorker, Nearing the threshold of the nine teenth century the nation imperilled its neck while learning to ride a bicycle. Behold these feminine ex ponents on an Easter day parade of Central Park in the year 1888. On the chignon, a dear little pancake sailor hat The very pink of fash ion! A studied collar helped the rider to keep her balance. The shirtwaist crackled with righteous starch also, and the rustlings de noted the many raffled petticoat un derneath. A heavy woolen skirt obligingly dusted the bicycle wheels. It was a great life. Tandems coaching parties jingling sleighs—so ran the tenor of New York’s sporting ways, when the dty was rapidly growing—-but still in its self-conscious ta—a QOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOBOOOOOOOOOOPOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOO PANCY DRY GOODS WOMEN'S WEAA OOOOeQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOeoOOOOOQfyVWWWWWt^rxwfM^ SHOES OF REFINEMENT Six New Styles This Week For your approval Discard your shsffy shoes and get into a pair ‘of these neat dressy new ones and get the benefit of a fall 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? $3.95 to $9.00 IVEY’S “THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES" FEEDS AND MORE FEEDS Chowder for your hens Cow Chow for your cows Omolin for your horses and mules Pig Chow fo/your hogs Hay and Straw, . We carry groceries of most anything to eat. PHONE 182 CASH FEED STORE WHERE QUALITY COUNTS Wanted: 300 Large Fat Hens The Poultry Market is still dull but we have an order for 300 large hens and will pay 18 cents per pound for all hens weighing 4 pounds and over delivered to us by Sat urday noon, December sth. Small hens not wanted but will use a limited num ber at 16 cents per pound. C.R BARRIER & CO. DELCO LIGHT 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 ..Phone 669 Concord, N. C. The Most Appre ciated Gift of All Hoosier Beauty Kitchen Cabinet A Working Center! That’s the first thing every kitch en needs. And in the Hoc»ier Beauty you have a perfect one. All the things you work with are assembled here in one spot-right where you do the work. And the Hoosier is such a handsome piece of furniture* too. Whether in shining white enamel, soft'French Grey or rich golden oak, it brings an air of charm and attractiveness to any kitchen. Let the man of the house know that the Hoosiei would be the most appreciated gift of all. H. B. WILKINSON Alemite Lubricating Service We do not use any Lubricants except Alemite Trans mission, Differential and Chasis lubricants, one which al lows the easy shifting of gears even in Zero weather, and greatly reduces friction. Get alcohol in your radiator before it .freezes. Gas, Oil, Tires, Tubes, Accessories, Car Washing, Tire Changing CENTRAL FILLING STATION PHONK 700 . - V.,.' : 1 ■'> 'V-' rv ■ K,‘ jrssFFvf* v, v v . Thursdny, Dec. 3, 1925
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Dec. 3, 1925, edition 1
10
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