Miss Ethel Flow has purchased a self-player piano.
A.D. Correll and John Correll of China Grove made a trip to the mountains last Saturday.
I.E. Smith is not getting along so well. The doctor expects to lance his leg.
C.A. Weddington of Morganton shows no improvement at this writing.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Overcash of North Kannapolis were visitors Sunday at Mrs. Emma Flowe’s.
We are looking forward to the close of our school. Come all, and help to make our exhibition interesting.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Weddington were visitors last Thursday night at the home of his mother, Mrs. Elva Weddington.
Miss Ethel Flowe returned home Saturday to spend Easter.
People through this section sure have their share of French measles.
We are sorry but Tulip wishes to inform Busy Bee that the faithful hen hatched out 10 little biddies and five little guineas and there were 16 taken off.
We are glad that Busy Bee answered the other item and wasn’t called upon. Here is another one: Three hens set on all those 14 eggs for four weeks and hatched two little biddies. So we want her to tell us which hen would be called the mother of those two little biddies, the one that hatched them or the one that laid the eggs.
Mr. and Mrs. H.V. Karriker of Unity were visitors Sunday at Mr. H.L. Karriker’s.
The Easter meeting closed at St. Enoch’s Church Easter Sunday. Rev. L.P. Bolden preached some excellent sermons.
A.D. Correll has purchased a house and lot from H.H. Overcash of Enochville.
J.S. Calvin has lots of logs at his mill yard to saw. He has been doing lots of sawing for the last while.
Mrs. T.M. Widenhouse and Mrs. J.C. Harmon and Miss Lois Honeycutt of Kannapolis were visitors last Thursday evening at Mrs. Elva Weddington’s.
Those tomato plants that appeared in an item not long ago were nine inches high certainly must have been growing downwards for they are just about one inch and a half high now.
Jap and Frank Hall of Kannapolis spent some time with Frank Weddington last Sunday.
The east egg hunt which was given at St. Enoch Saturday evening was largely attended and was certainly enjoyed by the children.
--TULIP
From page 6 of The Concord Daily Tribune, April 6, 1926.
AI tells me that French measles weren’t measles at all but were a colloquial name for roseola infantum (also called sixth disease), a mild childhood viral illness that causes a high fever for a few days followed by a pink rash once the fever breaks. It’s not caused by the rubella virus. Thanks Copilot.
newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn92073201/1926-04-06/ed-1/seq-6/
No comments:
Post a Comment