Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / March 31, 1926, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAGE EIGHT ADDS BEAUTY AND COMFORT Keeps Out Sun, Heat and Rain and Glare. Protects your Porch Furniture and Rugs. Makes Your Porch the Most Comfortable and cozy place about the home. *» Spend your long summer evenings in Comfort. Makes the ttome and surroundings more attractive. Our line this year *5 more beautiful than ever. Prices reasonable. Place your order now, before the rush and advance in prices, which will sorely come with the hot weather. Phone 347 now for samples Mid prices. Concord Furniture Co. THE RELIABLE FURNITL’RE STORE COAL No Dealer in Concord Sells Coal for Less than I do. Best Furnace Coal SB.OO to $ll.OO. Best Grate and Stove Coal SB.OO to $9.00. Best Steam Coal $4.00 to $7.50. Best Gas House Coke—Made in Concordsß.so. Purchase Your Coal where you can get QUALITY and SERVICE. A. B. POUNDS LOOK MEN! By a fortunate arrangement with one of our large manufacturers we are now in a position to offer you this Wonderful Shoe at $5.00 This is a genuine Calf Skin black and tan with a prine oak sole which will give you double the w.ear of the average shoe at this price, try one pair. We stand behind them. IVEY’S K.L CRAVEN & SONS PHONE 74 prjai Plaßter ™ ™ Mortar Colon Pack All Your Troubles in the Old Kit Bag and Phone, Phone, Phone! Why worry about what you are going to cook, or trouble yoursell to scatter your orders all over the city in order to get what you want to eat. Just make out your order and call "(10” for Fresh Meats, Cur ed Meats. Fresh Fish, Poultry. Butter, Eggs, Fresh Florida Fruits and Vegetables, Fancy Cakes and Crackers and any and all kinds of Staple and Fancy Groceries. “YOU NAME IT—WE BRING IT.” C. H. BARRIER & CO. SMI-LAX TONIC and Laxative Compound The new and wounderful Medicine for people who are •uffering with Weak and Rundown condition of the CSystem, Loss of Appetite, Constipation, Indigestion, Sto mach and Liver. See your Druggist for it is only sold through Drug Stores. OW PENNY IDS. ILK GET RESULTS Concord Daily Tribune TIME OF CLOSING MAILS The time of the closing of mails at the Concord postoffiee is as follows: Northbound 136—41 :00 P. M. 38*-10:00 A. M. 34 4 :10 P. M. 38— 8:30 P. M. 30—11 itfO P. M. Southbound 39 9 :30 A. M. 46 8 :30 P. M. 136 8:00 P. M. 29—U .00 I*. Id. jpLOCAL MENTION | Holy week services will be held in St. James Church tonight. Large congregations have been in attendance during the week. On account of special services in many of the city's churches there will be no regular mid-week service in the First Presbyterian Church to night. Police officers this morning report ed no case* docketed for trial in re corder's court this afternoon. Due to the fact that the court room is being repaired and changed a session of the court could not have been held if any oases had been scheduled for trial. F. ,T. Atkinson, white man wanted in Davidson county, was arrested here during the night by local police offi cers. During the morning he gave bond 'n the sum of .SIOO for his ap pearance at court in Lexington to morrow moruiug at 10 o’clock. The regular quarterly dividend of 1 3-4 per cent. , I $1.75 per share) on the preferred stock of Southern Gas and Power Corporation has been de clared payable April 1, 1926, to stockholders of record at the close of business March 12, 1920. H. C. Clawson has purchased land in Petren Heights and Clineheart ex tension, both in No. 4 township, ac cording to deeds filed here Tuesday. He purchased til I’etrea Heights prop erty from W. H. Walter for $1,700 and the Clineheart property from B. W. Durham for $275. Colder weather was predicted Mon day for the South Atlantic States for Tuesday night. The prediction did not hold good for Concord, at least, as temperatures rose during the night, following a rain of 24 hours. The rain fell practically without . inter ruption during the day and night. The DeMolay and Company E bas ketball teams played their last game in the city league at the Y Tuesday night. Tile former team won 24 to 20, the game being close throughout. The last game for the league will be play ed Thursday night when the Wildcat and Winecoff teams meet. The business men's volleyball team of the Y. M. C. A. will go to Char lotte tonight for a game with the Y team of that city. The locals have bCcn successful in other contests with the Charlotte team this year and are confident of victory in tonight's meet ing. The April meeting of the board of aldermen will be held at the city hall here tomorrow night. It is reported that no business of unusual import ance will be presented to the board, al though many routine matters are ex pected to get the attention of the al dermen at the meeting, scheduled to begin at 8 o'clock. The State Highway Commission at a meeting Tuesday awarded a con tract for a top soil road between Al bemarle and Salisbury. The contract covers 13.36 miles and is located on State highway No. 80. Another con tract let at the meeting covers part of the road from Salisbury to the Ire dell county line. Several Concord Shriners, it Is said, plan to go to Charlotte tonight to meet James C. Burger, of Denver, Col., Imperial Potentate of the Mystic Or der of the Shrine. He will arrive in Charlotte at 6:25 from Columbia, S. C., and will be honor guest to be giv en by Shriners at the Hotel Char lotte. The Lord's Supper will be adminis tered in Trinity Reformed Church on Easter Sunday at 6 a. m. and 11 a. m. A special preparatory service will be held Thursday evening at 7 *46 o’clock. All members are urged to at tend. The Consistory will meet im mediately following the service. Rev. M. E. Hansel, of the Second Preshy terial Church will preach the sermon. Persons in this county who plan to enter the 1926 "Better Garden Con test” should send their names at once to Miss Cooley, county home demon stration agent. A rule of the contest provides that the names must, be sent to headquarters in Raleigh by the middle of this month and Miss Cooley wants the names by April 15th. Postmaster’s Slayer Commences Sen tence. Charlotte, March 30.—The last chapter of a shooting affair, which last Thanksgiving night cost the life of Joseph P. Hinson, postmaster at P'neville, was written today in the office of the clerk of Mecklenburg superior court when Zeb Darnell, a prominent farmer, who In the course of a fight which occurred at a drinking party, killed Hinson and who bad been at liberty on a bond of $6,000 since the January term of court, pending an appeal, surrender 'ed to Sheriff Cochran to begin serv ■ ing the sentence imposed u|»on him. This was not less than four years, nor more than five, on the Mecklenburg county rooads. He was taken to McLaughlin's convict camp, near Mint Hill, this afternoon. “Dar nell surrendered to the sheriff this morning at the expiration of the time allowed for filing an appeal,” said J. Laurence Jones, his counsel. A seemingly ordinary piece of car pet at 10 Downing Street, the official residence of the British Premier, was discovered, in the process of cleaning, to be a Persian rug of great value. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE ~ TOMIsW ssfslp onder if these men who invent windshield wipers could invent some kind of an automatic handkerchief? They had a tornado in Florida. Very little damage was done, but it wao quite a blow to the people. Turkey ban raised the tariff bar on American goods so now we can ship her some genuine Turkish cigarets. In Denver, Colo., a girl shot up three robbers. She will make 6ome man a fine husband. New York musician *mys music is the audible god- PerhaiM* it is, but some of it. sounds like the devil. I In Baltimore a man had his aif p’ane stolen. No doubt the thief grabbed it and just flew. (Copyright, 192 G, Noa Service, Inc.) OI K HEALTH. Sunlight treatment is said to have ended the horrors, of infantile paraly sis. According to I>r. G. Murray Lc vick. medical director of the Heritage Graft Schools at Ohailey, England, who originated the treatment, no other, treatment has ever had as good results as this treatment. I)r. Derick first, discovered that neurasthenia in gi\>wn-j ups and rickets in children are due! to t 4 he same cause. He claims that] these diseases are nutritional disturb-! auces of the nerve centers affecting j the bone in the young and the nervous j system in the old. His success in treating these diseases with the sun’s rays led him to apply it to eases of I infantile paralysis. Airsickness, or the fear of it. has de-1 terred many people from using air! transportation. Airsickness is about the same as seasickness and is caused by sudden jolts up and down when the the plane hits air pockets or currents. The medical adviser to the British air, ministry lias been studying the-prob-j lem of airsickness but has found no way to solve it by the use of drug' ; or anything else. The trouble, the adviser claims, is that centilation 6f an inclosed airplane cabin is particularly difficult. If the air in the cabin is changed often enough to keep the car bon-dioxid content low there must be a terrible draft on someone. If drafts are excluded the carbon-dioxid content in the small cabin soon rises and the air becomes unpleasant. This condition, particularly at meal times, aids in producing airsickness. In the opinion of Dr. J. E. Walker, of the Army and Navy general hos pital, washing dishes in hot soap-suds will help to prevent pneumonia and other diseases. If the dish water con tains one half of one per cent, of or dinary yellow or brown soap, he says, the pneumococeus which causes pneu monia and the streptococcus whiejj causes any number of diseases “be come discouraged immediately, emit three feeble groans, and take their places in the army of those that are dead and done.” I)r. walker has con ducted scientific tests which revealed that cold soap solutions did not defi nitely affect typhoid germs. the tests showed that as soon ns the temperature of the solution was rais ed to body heat or higher the germs were conquered. The proper dish water then, is not only soapy, but hot. Lack of love means an early grave, says Dr. Henry Elkin, medical direct or of the Massachusetts Mental Hy giene Society. In liis opinion “love starvation” is sending countless men and women past 40 to untimely graves. “A little lovin’ now and then,” he points out. often furnishes the tonic necessary to prevent the middle-aged person from becoming a gibbering idiot. “Nothing is deadlier,” he claims, “than a man or woman ap proaching old age with nobody to love. The chronic diseases of old age are often blamed for death when ‘love mal nutrition* is really the cause.” Exit Paint Pot vm : i ’. I Miss mAh* k. johusom CHICAGO—Rouge pots and Ifp. Sticks are due to follow the bustle and other feminine aids to charm into retirement if the prognostica tion of Miss Marie K. Johnson, di rector of the Better Health Bureau, comes true. “Styles in complexions." Mist Johnson says, "are going to be ao natural and the milk fed girl will come Into her own." Her recipe for beauty is simpl*. “Drink a quart of milk a day. or a pint of rich, germ-free evaporated milk diluted with water, and add an hour's exercise in the sun bine." the says, “and continue until he apeaka about the buDgalbU uud tli* tienbiag rosea.' “Proper Food and Exercise," bp ARTHUR A. Former physical director, Cornell Medical College Practical suggestions for inducing sleep WOHUNTNG ABOUT GETTING TO SLEEP NEVER. HELPS TIE person who is of 'a nervous temper ament, or the brain worker who cannot for, get the happen ings of the day upon retiring, will find the fol lowing sugges tions helpful in inducing re freshing slum ber. One of the best methods to encourage sleep Is to try to reproduce the con ditions which make a child’s rest so perfect. Exercise active ly enough during the day to feel the need of rest when night falls, and then try to dismiss all thoughts from the mind, especially thoughts of work and worry, which will excite the brain in endeavoring to solve problems, therefore keeping it in the same chaotic condition as it has been all during the day. A great many people find that a glass of warm milk and a cracker before retiring for the night insures sleep. The ex planation of this Is that the amount of blood in the brain is lessened by making the stom ach’3 organs active. There are many different causes for Insomnia, and It is impossible to connect this con dition with any one functional disorder. However, it is gen erally agreed that in chronic cases it is purely psychological as these victims always dread going to bed and work them selves up to a nervous pitch con vincing themselves that they are going to lie awake half of the night. Two suggestions I have known to prove beneficial are these: Just before retiring place the General Menu BREAKFAST : Any kind of fruit; cereal with milk or cream; dark bread toasted with butter; and coffee substitute. Drink two glasses of water between breakfast and lunch. LUNCHEON: A soup of any kind, fruit corn muffins and a glacs of milk. Drink two glasses of water between lunch and dinner. DINNER: Broiled lean meat, chicken or fish; two green vegetables. For dessert a pudding; dark bread and cocoa or chocolate. © A. A. McGovern. “AIN’T MEN FNUUY?” Goldsboro News. There are a series of cartoons running in our daily papers which invariably end up with the terse query from the animal kingdom, “Ain’t ileu Funny?" When we read about the misfortune of Tony I’or celli, the Shelby Italian, who is re ported to have aroueed the ire of cer tain Shelbyitio because he burned a Bible, we can readily join in the cartoon question. Almost daily in some of our state papers, the Holy Bible is netd up to ridicule, and in free parlance, spit upon, by citizens of the state who pose and pass as representatives of the intelligence of the state, and our Shelby friends smugly read these de vouring flames from the press with out even a rise in temperature. But behold what a tide of wrath is raised when a poor, ignorant, passionate Southern Italian gets mad and burns a Bible. No doubt some of the selfsame protectors of the faith have on occasion hit their thumbs with a hammer, and cried ; "dam,” which was about on a par with the poor Italian’s efforts to satisfy his rage over something that had offended him. It is reported that Tony is a Catholic and therefore per sona non grata with those elements that hold that God must at all haz ards bo protected by the might of man. Why do they not know that God’s word lived and grew despite j the bonfires of medieval days? I It is also reported that Tony after j recovering from his incipient frenzy asked one Graham, a Shelby citizen, i “What can I do to enable me to stay in Shelby?” and that he receiv ed the consoling answer, “Join a Christian church.” i This was no doubt calculated to have caused Tony to soliloquize "Ain’t Men Funny?" because Tony had always been led to believe that being a staunch Catholic, he belong ed to a Christian church. 1 But out of the riot of fact and opinion which arise from the Mhelby- Tony incident, this much is clear: The qualification for citizenship in the city of Shelby seems firmly fixed by tte fiat of one Graham, who thought not a priest, is reputed to be partial to the cowl and gown. To bo n resident of Shelby, it seems that one must “join a Chris tian church." No doubt when the next United States census is taken there will.be appended to the report a comment upon this once populous city entitled "Strange case of shrink age. or what happened when Tony lost his temper.” 1 We heartily refer our laborer* in the mission field to the Shelby method of Christian conversion. I “Ain’t men funny?” I * A special of bamboo with a square stem grows in Japan. . - feet in a pan of hot water. This tends to draw the blood from I the head. The I other way Is to do some passive exercise Just be fore retiring. it Is not a good habit to He on the left elde all through the night, aa this causes a slight pressure on the hsart, and for the nervoua per- son this is bad. as it makes them conscious of the heart’s action. Therefore, a good plan Is to lie on the left side until drowsi ness comes, and then turn on the right side. The circulation may be affect ed by lying in a cramped-up position in bed, and this may retard sleep. It Is beßt to sleep with the body straight and re laxed, and without any con sciousness of weight or strain, and not too much bed covering as due to Us weight it is a hindrance to sleep. The body should create its own heat, and if a normal amount of coverings are used and found insufficient, it is better to remedy this con dition by improving the circula tion than by the added number of blankets. Regardless of the hour at which we retire, we should rise at the same hour every morn ing In order to be properly tired for the next night’s sleep, and after mental work during the day there should be some mild recreative physical work In the evening—not too much, as an overtired body Is similar to being nervously fatigued and will have a tendency to keep one awake. An enterprising London hawker makes a living out of weodings. As he says, the one thing generally for gotten is the old boot or shoe for good luck. So he is on the spot with a selection ready to be tied on the back of the honeymoon motor-car, He also supplies rice and confetti. DEMOCRATIC PRIMARIES The Democratic voters of Cabarrus Ccunty are hereby requested to meet at their respective voting precinctß on Saturday April 17th, 1926, fpr the puipose of selecting five members of the Township Executive Committee and naming delegates to the County Convention on April 24th to be held in the county court bouse. At the County Convention dele gates will be named to represent the county at the State Convention to be held in the city of Raleigh on April 29th. The primaries will be held in the several townships and wards at 2:30 p. m. ROSA B. MUND, Vice Chairman County Demo cratic Executive Committee. Concord. N. C.. March 22. 1926. Qaa kJCC ROBINSON’S MILLINERY For EASTER Millinery Department MISS ALUE LEGO, Prop. tTake your time and ours too. In the Easter comings and | goings it's so easy to hur- j has to he sometimes worn as you please. You don’t want to sublet your lease on satisfaction— you don’t care who wants you to hurry. At HOOVER’S -you are master of your own time and ours too. Schloss Bros. & Co. Easter Suits from $25.00 to $50.00 Easter SchOble Hats $5.00 to SB.OO And Easter Shirts, Hosiery and Neckwear of all the Latest Designs HOOVER’S,Inc. THE YOUNG MAN’S STORE I qooooooooooooooooooooeooooeoooooooooooooooooooooc i’ . ■ $! w It is our constant endeavor to so conduct our professional js> \ I;; activities tiiat we may reflect honor upon our profession. tjj ib With an advanced equip ment and a thorough knowledge we jjj render a noteworthy service. j ] 1 f i Ow/9* r S-MlCbncord-N.C. | I Easter is the first Sunday in April. Remember fine quality in Dry Cleaning depends on workmanship you never see. Your fav orite Spring apparel de serves the unfailing care 0 in refreshment that our 8 reputation insures. g RHONE 787 | “MASTER” Cleaners and Dyers Office 85-87 W. Depot St BANKER’S MONEY DIDN’T HELP HIM “Have spent a fortune in doctoring. Twelve years ago I became afflicted willi stomach trouble which steadily became worse. I frequently became prostrated with colic attacks and bloating. My doctors wanted to op erate for gall stones. I wished to avoid an operation and on advice of a friend tried MAYR’S ‘One Dose Will Convince’ with excellent results as since taking it about 2 years ago my trouble has entirely disappeared.” It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract, and allays the inflammation which causes prac tically all stomac'a, liver and intes tinal ailments, including appendicitis. One dose will convince or money re funded at Gibson Drug Store and druggists everywhere. Engraved Wedding Invitations and I announcements on short notice at Tfmet-Tribune office. We repre sent one of the best engravers In the United States. ts. Wednesday, Mar. 31, 1923 * Country Cured Meats Kingan Meats Fresh Each Week \ When early spring time comes, we j always stock our wasebouses with the I Very Best Meats. Country Cured Hama, Sides and 1 Shoulders. We sell you whole or 1 Slice to Suit. Fresh each week: Kingan’s Reliable Hams 1 KJugau’s 1 Lb Breakfast Ham 1 Kingan’s Breakfast Strips. We also have Better Western Rib I Side and Fat Back than you find in ' meat stares. Our splendid Delivery men go quid everywhere. PHONE as# Cline & Moose CONCORD COTTON MARKET WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 1936 Cotton . ,xf Cotton seed JB2 1-8 CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET^ (Corrected Weekly by Cline & Moose) Figures named represent prices vim for produce on the market : Eggs i Cora fl.lo Sweet potatoes $1.60 Turkey* JjJ Onions $1.76 Peas $2.00 Butter .$6 Country Ham Jg) Country Shoulder JO Country Sides JO Young Chickens .38 Hens .23 Irish Potatoes 2.00 PEARL DRUG CO. — Jr
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 31, 1926, edition 1
8
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