Wednesday, Dec. 0, 1025 r^ociETVi The Leader Here Is the Gigolo hat that Is sue! a sensation in Paris as well as ii this country. The dented crow* makes it easily adjusted to any head, and the narrow balm is the smart nne of the moment. In soft French felt, this hat cannot be surpassed in chic. CONCERT THIS EVENING To Be Given at Forest Hill Method-1 Ist Church at 7:30 O’clock. Charles Trowbridge Tittinann. bas so. and Edwin M. Steokel, organist, will give n concert at Forest Hilll Methodist Church this evening at 7:30 o'clock. The following will he the program : Triumphal March from “Aida" (Verdi) Andante cantabile (Siring Quartet) (Tschnikowsky) Mr. Sfeckeel Caro mio ben •_ (Giordani) L'Huere Exquise (Reynaldo Hahn) The Little Irish Girl a (LOhn). Mr. Tittman Fantasia on “My Old Kentucky Home" (Lord) Mr. Steokel The .Two Grenadiers (Schumann i Mr. Tittmann On the Road to Mandalay (/peaks) l>una a (McGill) My* Little Banjo (Diehmoiit) The Sundown Sea (Edwin-51. Steeael) Hard Trials (Burleigh) Mr. Tittnuiun l’oet and Peasant Overt are (von Suppe) Mr. Steokel Study Club to Meet With Mrs. Cliss. Cannon. The Study Club will meet at the . home of Mrs. Charles Cannon on I Nprth Cuion street Thursday aftee- noon at 8 o'clock. - j Julia Magruder Rook Club Media. | .The Julia Alagrnder Book Club held 1 a meeting Tuesday afternoon at the i home of Mrs. W. C. Houston, on j North Union street. Three new mem- ] bers were welcomed into the club at I this meeting. They were Sirs. L. T. Hartsell, .Tr., Mrs. \Y. L. Burns, nnd Mrs. A. Jones Yorke. Mrs. S. J. Ervin rend a pa] ter on | Van Dyke's “First Christmas Tree.” At the conclusion of the program, a sociaL hour was held. Refreshments were'served by the hostess. CHEST COLDS Redden the skin by the use of hot applications. Then massage briskly with Vicks, spread Vicks on thickly and cover with i hot flannel cloths. VICKS w Vapoßub Peer IT Million J m tw y.qrfr i ~ !»■ -rvr j -J •old By •“isszt&jsr Day ItM MB Night Flmms SM-IML JL ,> • / ... * ". , . ■ PERSONALS /( - Mrs. J. Lindsay Ross has returned from Elkin, where she spent several days with Mrs. P. B. Means. C-* : • • ... j. Mrs. AV. M. Morrison has returned to her home in the county after visit ing her brother, T. M. Hudson, in . Rockingham. i • • • A. G. Odeil, Jr., has returned to the home of- his parents here after spending 'a week in Philadelphia vis iting his uncle, Dn Fred Patterson. • • • j E. F. White will return home this I evening from Asheville, where he has been for his health for the past sev eral months. He will probably re main in Concord for the remainder of the winter. Mrs. Correll TO Assist In Recital. Mrs. Nell Herring ’Correll will as sist in the program which is to be giv en Friday evening by Mrs. Janie Alex ander Wagoner. The program is to consist entirely of the compositions of Mrs. Wagoner. In addition to Mrs. Correll, Mrs. Nancy Patterson Edwards, William Wright, of Winston-Salem, and S. Kay Patterson will assist. No invitations were issued in Con cord but the public is invited to at tend the recital which is to be held at the High "School Auditorium at 8 o'clock. ! Art and Literature Department to Meat. The Art and Literature Depart ment of the Woman's Club will meet at 7:30 o’clock Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. A. B. Pounds on West Corbin street. Joint hostesses with Mrs. Pounds are Mrs. R. C. Ris ley and Mrs. N. K. Reid. An inter esting program has been arranged for this meeting, / TRAVELER FOUND AUTO SEAT TO HIS LIKING ' Owen Green Refused to Leave Auto After Being Given a “Lift” by Charlotte Altn. It required the services of a poliee officer to move Owen Green from the back seat of an auto here Tuesday, i but once he was taken from the car he was given a comfortable cot in the county jail. The story about Green runs something like this, according to police officers: j Two Charlotte men headed towai-d Concord in a sedan, were hailed by- Green who asked for a lift. They agreed, giving him thd entire back seat of the ear. No sooner was he in the car, it is said, than Green went jto sleep, the companions detecting ■ then that he was drunk. When the j party reached Concord the Charlotte j men shook Green and suggested that j he get out. j Green paid qo attention to them. | He found the siat of the auto better i for sleeping purposes than anything l else he had tried recently, and he not ' only refused to get out, but he re -1 fused to be awakened. Patrolman Holdbrooks was called ] by the Charlotte men nnd nfter pull | ing. shaking and shouting nt Green i the officer succeeded in waking him. A bottle of alcohol, with a grass stopper, and a bottle of dope, were taken from the prisoner, the officer rei)orted. He also had on his person several snuff boxes, a quantity of .matches, soap, tobacco and, other tilings too numerous to mention. At police headquarters Green told the officers that he had recently served a term on the chain gang nt Spar tanburg. S. C. Boastingly he added. "And Capt. Talbert said I was the finest worker he ever had there.” Green that he would get a “recommendation" from Capt. Talbert and later added that he would also soon get a ''discharge." When asked why he had been put on the chain { gnug Green, with head nodding and ! mouHi twitching, said: I “A man doped me and took $250 from me.” “They put you on the chain gang because you let him take the money from you?” an officer asked. “Yes.” replied Green, and imme diately he was taken to jail. Green told the officers that he eame from the north but had been in the south abyut. eight years. He did not explain, however, whether he spent thp entire eight years nt the Spartan burg prison camp. MRS. M. J. ISENHOUR DEAD AT HOME ON CEDAR STREET Funeral Services Will Be Held Thurs day Morning at St. Johns Lutheran Church. Airs. M. J. Iseuhour. 84, died early this morning at her home on 131 Cedar street after an illness which, though over a year in duration, had been critical for a period of one week. Funeral services will be held at St. • Johns Lutheran Church Thursday l morning at 11 :30 o'clock nnd buriel [ Will be made in St. John's cemetery. I J. H. C. Fisher, pastor of Mt. Her- I moil Lutheran Church, will officiate [ and will be assisted by Rev. L. A. t Thomas, pastor of St. James Church, [ "and Rev. L. D. Miller, pastor of St. I Johns Chufreh. I Mrs. Isenhour was born in No. 0 , township March 14, 1841, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Solomon Fisher. Af ter marriage, vhe moved to No. 11 township where she lived until several years ago when she moved to Con cord. She was a devoted member of Alt. Hermon Lutheran Church, being one of the charter members of this church at its founuding iu 1881. Surviving are three sons, C.' A. Isenhour, W. N. Isenhour, both of Concord, and G. T. Isenhour; of Hast ing, Oklahoma. f \ ’ Pallbearers at the funeral. will lie six grandsons: Uhy Isenhour, Guy Isenhour, CTjffie IxWi hour, Earl Isenhour and Oscar Shim pock. Twenty-live grund children also survive. i USB PENNY COLUMN—IT PAVs An Occasional Column By MILES WOLFF Glenua, the girl contributor, again comes to the bat. Stung by last week's innuendos iu this column to the effect that she was 'incapable of continuing her literary endeavors which site promised weekly, she brought her facile pen into play this week and had her item In the sanctum, ready to be published on Monday. ■However, I was busy Monday after noon, what with mailing checks to clamoring creditors and with answer ing long due letters from friends, so I did not get to do any work. (Hen na. therefore, did not appear in her regular Tuesday paper. Before I forget it, one of the Kan napolis contribs writes a very personal but flattering epistle in which she at tributejCher continued reading of our sheet to my very spasmodic effusions. Here is what she says: “AVe receiv ed a statement telling us our sub scription to ’your’ paper had expired and I'm blaming, you for it, as it is our first one since you’ve been re porter. I had planned to have the pa per stopped but feel that I can’t live happily (the last two words under scored) without hearing from you, so I will be down at the first opportunity to renew my subscription if I have to borrow the money.” * Coming bnek to Glenna, here ■ is what she has to say: “It has been unfortunate that I have had to disappoint you for two weeks now. Airy Wolff told you last week how .it happened that I did not write. I was too exhausted from my trip to the 'Carolina-Virginia gumc. The life of a little butterfly is a frag ile thing and I was weary from doing the butterfly act. That reminds me —have your tried the Charleston? “If you have not. you simply must learn it for Christmas. I would rec ommend it to all debutantes as it will make them the most popular dancers on the floor at the holiday fes- I tlvities. To the flit because it is bound to reduce you. It develops a figure like Annette Kellerman. I say this with all modesty, because I have tried it ami know it to be the tcuth. If you are thin and anaemic, it will improve your looks one hun dred per cent. It stirs up the circu lation and improves the color. For the old and the. young, the fat and the thin, the Charleston is the tiling to make you young in body and spirit. “Greater than all these advantages, it gives you the Christmas spirit. As your feet swing back and forth you feel your spirits soaring and by the time you have learned the first step, you are converted to this most fan tastic and ex’ll ila rat ing of all amuse ments. “Between reecuperatlng from the Carolina-Virginia game and learning the Charleston for the Christmas sea son. 1 have had little time to give to my literary pursuits. “I did get time to read the Blind Bow Boy and was disgusted. Such u. book. I would like to meet the man wrote it to see just what a char acter lie is. He has written a bok about men nnd women and has not a red-blooded man or woman in it. The aim of the books seems to be to cor rupt the only character who is not corrupt when the book opens. It suc ceeds. "The principal characters nre a mother without a mother's love, a wife without affection, a father withr out a sense of duty to his family, and a young boy without will power thrown into the whirlpool of the fast est life in New York to become the plaything of a snake charmer with no more morals than a cat. is indeed a rare book and not to be recommend ed to the joung and innocent, and the older people will dislike it for its lack of revelancy. “In writing a book' it is natural to draw upon the imag’untiou and to ov erdraw tlie characters blit there are bounds beyond which one must not go ami I for one think that Van Vetch en has stepped beyond the pale. The ultra modern and the followers of his school willl call'roe proviciaal and in sular. no doubt. Let them do it. Bet ter men than I have been so named be fore. If you must read a new book, read the ‘Professor's House.’ or 'The Portrait of a Man With Bed Hair.' You will find them much better read ing.” THE ADDRESS. AVords . . . Meaningless words , A speaker droningly drearily on I’ll rases frightfully thrown together l — I Something For the Home f// jl (J A |J You give with wisdom when you tftodse things of xr V Ir'sT'^'ycomfort and daily use for the home: Such gifts say ‘‘.Merry \. Lr ® i•» ¥ Christmas" for many years and yield the durable satisfaction X, • i , . I ’ of purpoficful investment. For those seeking “the gift of wis- J/L ' ™ » dom" all roads lead to our store. Convenient terms. Concord Furniture Co. 1 The Reliable Furniture Store THE CONCORD OAILY TRIBUNE Phrases old and worn r ' Stories—silly, pointless stories. Beginning them always with: “That reminds me” or “I pass this on for what ’tis worth.” Yawns ... AVatches stealthily brought out , Then boldly —At last the end. The pain, O God, of rain »- Is not one-third As great as pain of vain v And foolish word. grady McAllister to . BE BURIED TOMORROW Funeral Services AVill Be Held To morrow Morning at 10 O’cloch at Mt. Pleasant. Funeral services for Grady AlcAllis ter. nine-year-old son of Prof, and Airs. George F. AlcAllister, of Alt. Pleasant, who was fatally . injured Tuesday shortly after noon when struck by a truck driven by Otis Bunn, of Ansonvilte, willl be held to morrow moruing at 10. o'clock in Alt. Pleasant. The services will be held in Holy Trinity Church, conducted by the pns tor. Rev. C. L. P. Fisher, assisted by Rev. R. A. Goodman, of Newberry, S. o'.. former pastor of the Church. A jury summoned by Coroner Joe A.< Hartsell. of Concord, heard evi dence in the ease Tuesday afternoon and exonerated Bunn of all blarfie as evidence introduced tended to show that t’he youth ran directly in front of the truck. The accident occurred near the Alc- Allister home as Grady was going to his home from school. He tagged a playmate am) darted into the street to keep from being tagged just as the truck came along. He was struck by the front part of the truck and lived only a few minutes. The Real .South Seas. AA'hen “Never the Twain Shall Aleet,” the Cosmopolitan Corporation's picturization of Peter B. Kyne's pop ular story released by Aletro-Goldwyn, is presented at the Concord Theatre for two days, beginning today, the photoplay-going public will have an opportunity of viewing the actual scenery, people and life in general as it is lived in the South Sen Islands. The greater part of-this new pic ture was made in Tahiti/with num erous backgrounds nnd native Scenes taken on the Island of Aloorea, which is orte of the* less civilized of the South Sea group. In bringing “Never the Twain 'Shall Aleet" to the screen the Cos mopolitan Corporation assembled a noted cast of players, including Anita Stewart. Bert Lytell. Huntley Gordon. Justine Johnstone. George Seigmann, Lionel Belmore, Emily Fitzroy, AA'il liam Norris. Florence Turner, and Princess Alnrie de Bourbon. Alaurice Tourneur directed the production. Play at Alt. Pleasant Postponed. The play, "Little AA’oinen.” which was to have been presented v iit Alont Amttenft on Friday evening, has been imstponed a week on account of the death of Grady AlcAllister, who w of killed Tuesday afternoon. The play will be presented at a lat er time, the date to be announced at; the future. CONCORD COTTON MARKET WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 9. 192.*, ; Cotton .18 1-2 to .11) Cottou Seed .4*l j.o Sweets. Sweets!. Pure bright North Carolina Comb Honey. AA'e contracted for a big lot. Can sell it cheat). Our price 30c a pound. It will go fast,,-So get yours : now. t ", ’• , Pure Cabarrus County Sorghum. , We have had good sales on it. If you . taste it you buy it. Only a few bar rels yet. Ponce Port)> Rico Alolasses. That * High Fine Flavor that can't lie de scribed. but must be tasted. It’s the - only Real Sweet Good Alolas-c.-. AA’e deliver quick everywhere. Phone us. Send your vessel. Cline & Moose I i ||Qu Your Wife’s j j As executor or trustee or rt&ur estate we are ready to assume every detail, every responsibility from the day your will becomes effective. ' Let us give you particulars in a personal talk at your convenience . , Citizens Bank and Trust Company A. F. GOODMAN, Trust Officer |Parks-Belk Beauty Shoppep 1 COIFFURE The modern woman no long- 'it er puts up her hair in un •M sightly “curlers." The per- s >v Jibjga»&fe manent wave has become r universal. We employ the J *s' best method and our prices vt g are,air y-ißmtiEtiTl .s “° ur M " ho