Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Dec. 29, 1926, edition 1 / Page 7
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■dnesday, Dec. 29, 1916 KANNAPOLIS DEPARTMENT CONDUCTED BY JAZZY MOOSE INAPOLIS Y. M. C. A. VB. LENOIR-RHYNE y Night at Tcwel City Gjamas *r—Undefeated Pioneers Will et Wineccff Highs in Preliminary —1825 Loopsters Tangle B’a* Team This Afternoon Christmas Entertainment at •*Y" Tonight. nnapoLs, Tier. 2;*.—Xtill Mani- Kannapolis “Y” tyros will wind eir 1026 floor business here Kn ight by enguging an all star ag tion from Leuoir-Hhync College, preliminary )iumber the unde 'Pioneers will meet the Wine iigbs, in what is expected to re fast and tight affair. Y. M. C. A. men seem to be imbitious, as they have already (1 Olsen's Swedes, Greensboro lyiorsville and other teams of calibre. But in each contest have emerged somewhat stroug il Coach Mauldin plans no feeble iring the remainder of the cam- The Friday quintet is com of tlie cream of the Lenoir lot, iiig Lutiier Hodge, Pratt, Kar and Overeash. Igc is a former Kannapolis base erformer, having held a regular at second bnse during the 1023 i. At the Lutheran institute sved himself a capable exponent sketball and baseball and made bee meritorious showing on the •on. irriker left an excellent athletic I behind him when he quit Le take a coaching job ut China Farm Life. He is a resident ebvilla, a hamlet neur Kan- As is Overeash, a sterling, •thc-wool sort of an athlete, other well known oagers ap the collegiate line-up. They d to be from Salisbury, but entity is pot revealed. LOOpSTRRS VS. HIGHS. 1025 high school loopsters, otje strongest cage Combinations d at the local institution, will with the present liighs iu an on affair this afternoon at the Four members of this elub' 1 -playing basketball. Mvo br tcbolastic e'rolos and the other 111 Y. M. C. A. teams. They* fighting aggregation from the til). Line-up for Hie game •am l’os. 1020 Teum i UF. C. Fowler LF M. Widenhouse C Rollins ■r I£. (J. J. Widenhouse ler LG Walton -OTTK HIGH IN NEXT OFFICIAL GAME, lawn of the New Year will nek Caldwell's Charlotte highs ■ the next official game carded Little Wonders for January 5. ‘-Yuletide season has been for il liighs ait Unqualified sue (a. But the brand ,at,.oWMie«4>n k not been as- great as will be evi nced iu the approaching calendar .contests. Charlotte, Salisbury, kington, Gastonia and Belmont Ab l arc to be clicked off in regularity, ■er say played, for every team Bed looks mighty strong on paper. Jake Wade in Tuesday’s issue of I Charlotte Observer, has this to lelaini: P<'harlot to high was nosed out of t> championships last year in the gc gaipe. They were formidable : n e state titular race and in the tnur >nrut held at State College they ilied to be the class of the bunch." lud to make it more terrifying the ty of the letter men returned ear and sewed up berths on the iVEL CITY NEWS ITEMS. Ist mas entertainments will close t with the presentation of the oth 3. M. ('. A. program which med to start at 7..'{() o'clock, argo of toys was imported on y for distribution amoim the i. Besides receiving tile gifts uug people will have an oppor Bffi TOILER a MOVE SHE’LL NOT PERMIT •it GREAT CoTT : THOUGHT » MigHT WMMHI BB'Cci"hat they"' iE NEED YOU ! OF COURSE WsSk 2 A ME TO ** ur UP- xmltmltsiJ Mac . come in mv privatel l wou't MIM& rnr . .'j r1,..... , V, 1 *— ' ' PKRRY ON THE JOB SOME DO AND SOME DON’T $ CF l r W*** THE SAfAE WHN DQU'TCKA6O OCNOU COULD T T) am-y CMnwe m-foi^ 1 V* 11 TH —T ' jfafe.. , i XICVi OUT OF NEW SEARS’ ) Tq smz might Uafe a wot I ■ W&t* one- j THAT X USED /- CLUqlano S-PENP OF GOOD ’ . / TH* BMPUWBEX / 1 BUCRS <5 THERE GOOD CLEAN /' '-C OM NIW VEARf. / 1 . tuirity to see Sauta Claus in flesh and hear him iu a short talk. A movie of | comedies will top the entertainment. | Announcement is made that the quarterly meeting of the Ladies’ Aid and the Woman's Missionary Socie i ties will be held Thursday evening at j the Trinity Methodist Church. All j members are urged to be present as I some very important business is to ■be discussed. The meeting will con vene at 7:30 o’clock. I | Chinese, genius for self-govern ment is all that saves China from complete chaos during the revolu tionary ups and downs of the coun try, said A. H. George, British gov ernment commercial agent in Shang hai. SAVI BIab HLt Ur KAFIi/LT WHEN INTEREST HELPS By 8. W. STRAUS, President American Society for Thrift. ANEW ENGLAND bank re cently revealed a situation svhlch should teach a valuable les son In thrift. In 1836 a savings account was opened in that bank with deposit of 85. Not a cent has been with drawn; not a cent has bean added, excepting interest. Yet that ac wfaTßAutr * count today amounts to 8382.16 or more than 76 times the original deposit. The incident reveals how money piles up when given a chance. There is little or ho magic in the accumulation of wealth, except ing the magic of compound Interest. What you can earn personally baa Its limitations. There are no limits to the earning possibilities of your money. Perhaps some concrete figures will interest you. Save S9O a 04 t.i4nvc*r tht Income -at 6 per cent and in 28 years you will have $61,975. Put $5 in your savings bank earl week for 15 years. Based on 4% per cent interest compounded semi annually you will have $5,500. Save $25 a month, for five years Increase your savings to SSO a month for another five years. Go ip to SIOO for five years more; to $l5O for the next five years and to S2OO for the last half decade of the twenty-five year period. If your Income from these sav ings has been compounded at 6 per •cent every six months, bow much will you have? Exactly $54,946.61. 1 Even $1 deposited weekly sorter years will amount to $635.32 at 4 per cent compound Interest. Start at the age of twenty and save $33.14 per month with Interest compounded at 4 per cent annually and at 65 your accumula tions will be $50,000. These figures preach eloquent thrift Burmnno [ _ Have You Heard I This One? i . 11. u..., - Traveling By Street Car. j Jane—"lskl you "notice the fceau • tiful moon this evening!” | Katherine—" Yes. I saw the 1110,01 I comiug home on the ntreet car.” Nothing Much. “Pa, what are ancestors'; - ' I “Well, my son, I'm one of yours. | Your grandpa is another.’’ ■ - >’ "Oil! Then why is it people !>rpg ]about them?” Bright Pupil. I "Now suppose a man suddenly fell off the river bgnk into tiib river. He can't swim- He cries out. for as sistance. His wife beam him and runs to the banlf. Why does she run to the bank?" , And the bright pupil in the rear pi|ved out : “To draw bis insurance money." / Not Earigntion Farmer—The! West is a fine place. T’ve gottn good crop. Neighbor—How come? We aiu’t hod no rain this year. Farmer—i • atari; pertutoes and onions together. The onions got in the tutors' eyes and they watered themselves. Time To Leave. Lecturer—‘’Alloa- me. before I close, to repeat the words of the immortal Wehstev.’Y Listener fto wife)—“Land sakes Maria, let's git out o' here. He's a going ter start in the dictionary.” Holiday For A Certainty Teacher —“ Now. suppose I am leaving the school and a man comes up to 111 c. gives me a bliyv which knocks me down, and my foul strikes the puvoment with great force and I am killed. What is the consequence ”■ Pause. Finally, a pupil rose and said; "We. would have a holiday!” S KILLED AS CRACK SOUTHERN TRAINS CRASH KJm * ** JBw» gs : JMbMWlmBmPm, " v as n'SM• . lWv> ~s*c'; ;ji2. ' v ‘''j'ii|i>Piiii|i t'Si r^'Mm W Here is what was left of the locomotive of the Ponce Rockmart, Ga., December 13, resulting in the death- of 18 de Leoa, crack passenger train of ‘the Southern Railway, and serious injury to at least 50 other passengers.—lnter after It drove its. terrific force into the Royal Palm at national Newsreel Photo. THE CONCORD DATLY TRIBUNE WILSON PEACE AWARD IS GIVEN ELJHL ROOT Boe.ignition of Lalmr For Pennesieut Court Maile Through Award. New 'York. Dec. 28.—Eiihu Root, fm-ntisr aftcrrtarj- of state, received I the Woodrow Wilson foundation , ■peace -prize for 1020 at a dinner at the -Hole; Astor tonight on the'. 70th I anniveesary of the birth of the war time F resident. ’ The presentation -\was made by I [ t Plane Tuned Up for Flight to Southern Climes ■■ ■ -- - w .. --iriT|Ti|-Miiiii c /jflfl % r I | 4 Men are shown tuning up the San Antonio, one of the planes that were used in the army’ flight through southern republics. Major H. A. Dargue, who will command the flight, i •hown in the inseL , iintemitlonil Newsreel.) Norman H, Davi*. president of' the foundation.)!ml marked the recogni tion of Mr. Root’s work in 1020 in the creation of the permanent court of international justier “Thd growing prestige of the world Court and its success In preserving peace the settlement of in ternational questions of a justiciable character lias demonstrated * the itn portaffim of the service -Mr. Boot rendered in 1920,” said Mr. Davis. The Woodrow Wilson award ■— r—: -as medal accompanies a cash prize of $25,000. Mr. Root is the second per son to receive the award. Viscount Cecil of Chelwood, having received the 1024 prize. Viscount Cecil is Great Britain's chief representative to the league of uations. Ohio Home is Stf From Liquor Raiding. Columbus, 0„ Dec. 29—Ohio has gone back to an observance of the old English law which recognizes a man’s home as his castle—so far as state prohibition enforcement is con cerned- And no additional law was requir ed to bring about the change only an implied order by State Prohibi tion Commissioner B. F. McDonald that “henceforth and until” no pri vate some should be rnoested by state enforcement egents in serch of liquor. "Until” is the time that the state supreme court shall construe the la tv I governing authority of prohibitio \ enforcement officers as a result of a j raid last spring on the home of i State Senator George H. Bender i f Cleveland, an ardent dry A jury awarded Senator Bender $25- 000 damages against the raiding of ficer and iis bondsmen. The case wil: be appealed. Immediately after the verdict, Commissioner McDonald told his in spectors that hereafter they would invade homes at their own risk of having to pay heavy damages. He admits that his instructions will have the effect, of preventing further home raiding, except, perhaps, in eases where there is absolute proof before hand that the prohibition law is be ing violated. Confedrate Mother Living Raleigh, X. C. Dec. 29—Mrs. Ju- The Happy Christinas Season Calls to mind the pleasant relations vve'liave had with you during the past year and brings to us a deeper apprecia tion of old associations,‘and of the value of new friends. I his message of Good Will is to thank you for the many favors yon have shown us in the past and to ex tend to you and vours the very best Wishes fnr the New \ear, and-’ifi it may you be blessed with happiness and prosperity. ; | Yours for, Service, , Markson Shoe Store G. A. Moser, Manager WE THANK YOU With the drawing near of the end of the old year, we wish to thank our many; patrons and friends for their most loyal support during the months and years passed, and may the light of the New Year bring with it abund ance of Health and Prosperity for each and everyone. The Store That Satisfies, and the Home of Beautiful Furniture BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. The Store That Satisfies and the Home of Beautiful Fur niture. Atwater KentilL. Factory now on their Second Million IST M Get Yours Today From Yorke & Wadsworth Co, THE OLD RELIABLE EVERYTHING WORN BY THE WELL-DREŚED MAN PAGE SEVEN lia Anne Pridgen, 103. mether of a Ti , Confederate soldier and eontemp- __ lorary of every President of the‘Unit ed States since Washington, lives in Pender county, near the seme of the Revolutionary battle of if oof's Creek Bridge. Mrs. Pridgen as the mother of M. D. Pridgen who served with Lee. Ho was the eldest of 12 children, six of •whom are living. The youngest is 00. Her soldier son and her husband have been dead for several Khars. 1 Her mymory, despite her advanc ed is keeii;’ She''reciff& the day •; when the young men of the country marched'away to the Mexican wif\ and when the first buggy came into Pender county. 1 „ r ' Reciprocity; When lie bad carefully examined (the shoes the physician had brought in for repairs the German cobbl-r handed them back, saying: “Dcm shoes ain’t worth mending doctor.” I “Very well. Hans.” said the: “then !of course I won’t have anything done M I to them.” ;! 1 “Ve'l. but I stiarge you reefiy M cents already yet* 1 “Why, whot for?” 1 “Vy, when I came to see you <le r 1 ' udder day you barge me t'ree dol laris for telling me dot dore ain’t nod dings der matter mit me.” .
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Dec. 29, 1926, edition 1
7
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