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THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE "T It's Neuritis ! Not Rheumatism That erp. atafcttac pala U tbe upper am. about iba .houMer bUda.1 la Iba aaaw of t aark. alaac tba fat, arm ar Cava tba Lblcb and lag, ia of tra Kaajllli aot Saaaaaarbua. If ro bare severe fraatal heed arha wit a fxaUaf That eomethtng twitching ar pal Una at tba eyeball a -lull, artalac pala la tba back, accaaa paaiea by aa orrasiooai abootlaa pain In tb aide oumbaea an- ttngHag la (hp flag ar "aUtrfara" of pain here mid their, the chance arc (bat your trouble hi Neuritla. No matter wharf your pala la lo cated, too ran get prompt relief with out taking bromides, narcotic or other dope. Apply Tyamol Yver tba pirt that brrt. and you will be rid of tba tortnre. Tysnml la guaranteed harm leaa. It help to soothe and beat the weak. Inflamed nerrea. li.in t anffer any longer Get a $1 package of Tystuol Obaorls'tit from Paarl Drug Company. Tynm.1 Co., Mfg. Chemist, 400 Sot ter St., San Francisco. I SERGEANT TOWELt, jf the American Expedi tionary forces, tells how he became "Fit to Fight" for hia country, and won his war against Rheumatism. ' Popular Sergeant Sowcll la today a well man, and feels so Imppy and thankful that ho want every one suffering with rheumatism . to hear his story so that they in turn will follow his example and be restored to health. Could Not Work for Two years "I had rheumatism as had as any one could and had not worked for two years. May. 1917, was the black est month of my life. Both my less and arms swelled to double their size and I was taken to the Hospital. I got no better; doctors and medicines toad no effect. Enlisted at C.mp Dcvcns "No one knows how I suffered, un til I read about 'Neutrons Prescrip tion 00' and got a bottle. Itlght away I Improved; the swellings all left my arms and legs. What a relief after all tho pain and misery I - had gono through. Fully recovered In August. I enlisted, and served to the end of the war, with never a return of lthcu matlsm. No One Need Give Up Hop " 'Neutrpno Proscription 50' cured mo whera doctors and hospitals failed and I do not want any one, to give up hope until they have tried this wondorful preparation. I am a living proof of what It will do tor others". There Is no excuse why anyono should suffer with Rheumatism. (Jo to your Druggist today, 'and get a bottle of "N'eutrone Prescription 90" Ittd your system of rheumatic pol"'ns forever, "Neutronc Prescription "90" new romes In tablet as well as" liquid form, whichever Is preferred. Leading Druggists everywhere. Gibson Drug Store. .HBr"la W :... naaaV X. -.5. gaaBr ;TBaa A rVMgHK ,gi QMHgy dBaBH. $wP I frt 1 e F ""tit. a Ha . Job Printing Remember that this of fice is fully equipped to do every kind of pub-printing from the handbill to the dainty calling card and do it neatly, promptly, effi ciently and well. y 7J I1 VU1 Ul IWtl a CM (AT " . . .. r. 1: s yl ate as tlie quality ot our r, IL Times-Tribune ;2 1 Tribune Member The Aaaoeiated Preai la exclusively entitled to tba nae for republlcatloi of all newa diapatvaea credited to it or not oth?. wlae credited in this papeti all rUhta of republication of apedal dUpatchoa beraln are alao reserved, ad tlao tba local newa publlibad batata. ! Thawaade of waaaaa baa Jdaa ad bladder traaMa aad wm a aajgj t ha aotbiag ebr but kliaay traaMa, or tba raaalt of U the kaUay out ka a baa Why cafcditloa.'lbey may caaac the other organ to Paia ia tbc back, i aymptotn of kidney trouble. Don't delay starting treat meat. Dr. iGlmtr't Swamp-Root, a physi cian'a prescription, obtained at any drug tore, may be Juat tbc remedy needed to overcome auch condition. Get a medium or Urge size bottle immediately from any drug atore. However if you wish 6 rat to teat thta great preparation aend ten cent to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a aample bottle. When writ ing be sure and mention thia paper. SAGE TEA DANDY TO DARKEN HAIR I fa Grandmother' Recipe Bring Back Color aid Lustre to Hair to I Yon can turn gray, faded hair beau tifully dark and lustrous almost over night if you'll get a bottle of "Wyeths Sage and Sulphur Compound" at any drug store. Millions of bottles of this old famous Sage Tea Recipe, improved by the addition of other ingredients, are sold annually, say well-known drug gists here, because it darkens the haiir so naturally and evenly that no one can tell it has been applied. Those whose hair is turning gray or becoming faded have a surprise await ing them, because afttr one or two ap plications the gray hair vanishes and your locks become luxuriantly dark and beautiful. . This is the age of youth. Gray haired, unattractive folks aren't wanted around, so get busy with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound to-night and you'll be delighted with your dark, handfome hair and your youthful ap pearance within a few days. Ouch! Lumbago Pain! Rub Backache Away Infant Relief with a trial bottls of old "8t. Jacobs Oil." mall Kidneys cause Backache? No I They have no nerves, therefore can not cause pain. Listen! Your back ache is caused by lumbago, sciatica or a strain, and the quickest relief is soothing, penetrating "St. Jacobs Oil." Rub it right on your painful back, and instantly the soreness, stiffness and lameness disappears. Don't stay crippled 1 Get a small trial bottle" of "St Jacobs Qil" from your druggist and limber up. A moment after it is applied you'll wonder what became of the backache or lumbago pain. Rub old, honest "St. Jacobs Oil" whenever you have sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism or sprains, as it is abso lutely harmless and Uoesn't burn the skin. J" 1 Old Newspapers Fur Sale, 5 Cents a bundle. Tribune, and Times Office. USE PENNX COLUMNS IT PAYS. NOTICE TONIGHT AT 8 re as moder- of Associated Press t'.mn Mfc 3 B ftnwi nm - - - - ii . 3 II ! I 'till J hi... tt 1 M M m 3 vm t.i Wit I 3 3 ! 3 nra. 4 3 3 ( And Yet a Fool WOXIAM ALLBN WHTTB 11 ill 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii flkffrtrt, Mta, ar Wanaia Oa THE eichancea that cone to country nawapapar Uka our ba coaaa faaUUar friend aa tbc yaara paaa Una wbo raada ibeae pa nara reaularlr taOaa ta know Hunt rea In their wrapper, tboub to aa unpractlced cya tbe wrappcra ataia much alike. But wben be baa been poking hi ibumb tbroagb tbe paper huaka in a certain pile every morning far a score of yaara, be knowa by aome. aort of praaclenca wbcp a new paper appear ; and, wben tbe pile looka odd to him, be guaa bunting for tbe t ran ger and la not happy until lie baa found It. One morning thle apiing the stranger stuck Its head from the bottom of tlie exchange pile, and when we glanced at the handwriting of the address and at tbc one-cent stamp on tbe cover we knew It had been mailed to us by some one besides ilie publisher. For tho newspaper "hand" la aa definite a form of writing aa the legal hand or the doctor'a. The paper proved to be au Arizona newapaper full of saloon, ad vertislng, restaurant cards, church and school meeting notices, local items bout the sawmill and the woman's club, land notices and paid Items from wool dealers. On the local page In the midst of a circle of red ink wns the announcement of the death of Ilornce P. Sampson. Every month we get no tices like th'ls, of the deaths of old settlers who huve gone to the ends of the earth, but this notice was peculiar in that It suld : "One year ago our lamented towns man deposited with the arm of Cross & Kurtz, the popular undertakers and dealers hi Indian goods and general merchandise, $100 to cover his funeral expenses, and another hundred to pro vide that a huge boulder he rolled over his grave on which he desired the fol lowing unusual Inscription: 'Horace P. Sampson, Born Dec. (!, 1841), and died . And is not this a rare fellow, my lord? He's good at any thing and yet a fool.' ". We handed the paper to Alphabeti cal .-Morrison, who happened to be In the office at the time, pawing through the' discarded exchanges in the waste basket, looking for his New York Sun, and, after Colonel Morrison had read the Item, he began drumming with his fingernails on the chair seat between his knees. His eyes were full of dreams and no one disturbed him as he loked off into space. Flually he sighed: . "And yet a fool a motley fool I Poor old Samp kept It up to the end ! I take It from the guarded way the pa per refers to his faults, 'as who of us have not,' that he died of the tremens or something like that." The colonel paused and smiled Just perpeptibly, and went on : "Yet I see thaft he was a good fellow to the end. I notice that the Shriners and tlie Elks and the Eagles and the Hoo-hoos buried him. Nary an Insurance order in his! Poor old Samp; he certainly went all the gaits !" We suggested that Colonel Slorrison write something about the deceased for the paper, but though the colonel admitted that he knew Sampson "like a book," there was no persuading Mor rison to write the obituary. "After some urging and by way of compromise," he said, "I'm perfectly willing to gHi you fellows the facts fc and let you fix up what you please." Because the reporters were both busy we called the stenographer, and had the -colonel's story taken down ns he told It to' be rewritten Into an obituary later. And It Is what he said and not what we printed about Samp son that Is worth putting down here. The colonel took the big leather chair, locked his hands behind his head, and began : ' "Let i me see. Samp was born, ai he says, December 0, 1840, In Wiscon sin, and cjiiue out to Kansas right af ter the war closed. He was going to college up there, and at the second call for troops he led the whole senior class into forming a company, and enlisted before graduation and fouglit from that time on till the clob of. the war. He was a captain, I fnlnk, but yo never heard him called that. When he came here he'd been' admitted to the bar and wns a good lawyer a mighty good lawyer for that time and had more business 'n a bird pup with a gum-shoe, fie was Juat boy then, and, like all. boys, he enjqyed a good time. He drank more or less In the army they all did 'a far aa that goes, bm) he kept It up In a desultory way after he came here, as a aort of ac cessory to hia main business of life, which was being a good fellow. "And he was good fellow an aw ful good fellow, we were all yung then; there wasn't an old man on the towif site as I remember It. We used to 'load up the whole bunch and go huntlng-rcloslng itp the stores and taking the girl along and did not show up till mMnlght. Samp would always have a little something to Hike under his buggy seat, and we would wt up and slrig coming home, "He made a iot of money and blew It in at Jim Thomas' saloon, huylltf drinks, playing atud poker, betting on quarter norxes. ana lenamg It out t( ftrtlowa who helped him forget they'c borrowed It. And say In two en three years, after the chicken hunting set had married off, and begun in way to aettla down gamp book sr-zyr a .'J-iaaJE- aaeat fc caatta rktd aaa) at ta prat5J girl ta Wa alway taaagto taat aa m ta a M W tbc girl k a pairs . Uh in tba ftr.t eroad. Will be di lnl U) M 't.d " r twit! a aaj, Hactlaa Sr Faartk af July -a ai ht at otSar yawnr, filtoar waaM go oat and Up ovar all tbc board aide-1 walka la town, and jut faany algn oa tbc i ra building and atari, baar . bottle aa tba preaebrr treat porrb. j and raise Ned geoera. And ih.- fel low ot bit age who o nea tbe stores ' aad ware to alfbta. would aay to Saaip wben Ibey saw him coming doa abaat non tbe next day: "tie It when yuu'ti young. Hump, for when joa're old you u't And be would wink at 'cm. ; .- m teo d.. lars apiece for their damage and Jolly Ma way down tbc street to his oOce. "Now, you mustn't get the idea that Samp wa tbe town drunkard, for be never was He waa Just good fel low. When the second set of youug fellow outgrew him ami settled down, lie picked up with the third, and his wife's brown alpaca I - ,n to he uo tleed more or leaa among the women. But Samp's practice didn't seem to fall off It ouly changed. He didn't have so much real eatate lawlng and got more criminal practice. Gradually be hecume a criminal lawyer, and his fame for wit and eloquence extended over all the atate. Colonel Morrison ehuckled aud crossed his fat legs ut the aukles as h continued, after lluhllng the cigar we gave him : "Vfell, along lu'the late seventies we fellows that he started out with got to owning our own homes and getting on In the world. That was the time when Samp should have heen grubbing at his law hooks, but nary a grub for him. He was playing horse for dear life. And right there the fellows all left -him behind. Some were buylug real eslate for speculation; some run ning for otllce; some starting a bank; and others lending money at two per cent a month, and leading In the pray er meeting. So Samp kind of hitched up his ambition and tool; the slack out of his habits for a few months and went to the legislature. They say that -Alphabetical What's the he certainly did have a good time, though, when he got there. They re-! memher that session yet up there, and call it the year of the great Hood, for, the nwzhts, they were filled with mu-l Sic, as the poet says, and from the best accounts we could get the days were devoid of ease also, and how Mrs. Sampson -stood It we never could i find out, for, of course, she must have known all about It, though he wouldn't lot her come near Toiieka. He began to get pursy ithdi red faced, and was clicking it off with, his (If Hi set of young fellows. It took a big slug of whisky to set off his 1 oratory, but wheu he got It wound up i he surely could pull the feathers out 1 of the bird of freedom' to beat scan-, dalous. But as a stump sveaker you ! weren't always sure he'd fill the en gagement. He. could make a Jury blub ber and clench his fist ai the prosecut ing attorney, yet he didn't claim to know much law, and he did turn over all the work In the Supreme court to hia. partner, Charley Hedrlck. Then, when Clmrley was practicing before the Supreme court and wasn't here to hold him .down, Samp would get out and whoop It up with the boys, quote Shakespeare and make stump speeches on dry goods boxes at midnight, "Where xvas It" asked Colonel Mor rison of the stonogrnpher xvhen she had finished sharpening her pencil. "Oh, yes, along In the eighties came the bonin, and Samp tried to get In It aud make some money. He seems to have tried to catch up with us fellows of his age, and no' began to pfunge. He got In debt, and, wlicn the boom broke, he xvas still living in i rented'hutise xvith the rent ten monttls behind ; his part nership wus gone and Ills practice was cut down to .lolnt keepers, gamblers, and (he farmers who hadn't beard the Stories of his financial irresulartfles that xvere floating in unci town. "Vet his wife stu.ito him, forever explaining tn my xxifavjrt be xvould up. all right when he settled down. Bui wsmm. PI HHHHl i Ba bat a Uttte. kl uajuma. bus I aa) ta be 1 east to Ma tor while aa to to raaaa to taak to aw a coed Tae loaf with H 1 remember, several tiataa ta up, and uaca be kept t eiuru cuff and collar on tor nearly a year. But when Harrison waa elected, be Oiled Bp from bis shoe ta hia bat and didn't go borne for three days Oae day after that, whan be had gone back to hi flannel shirt and dirty eollara, to was silting lu my ufflce looking at tba Ore in tba box stove wben he brake oat with: 'Alphabetical what tba matter with me anyway I Thia town sends men to congraaa; It makes Supreme court Judges of other It aeuda fel low to Kanaaa City aa rich bankers It makes big merchants out of grocery clerks. Fortune Just naturally flltta with everyone In town, hut never wink do I get I knew and yon know I'm smarter than thoae Jay. I can teach your congressman economics, and your Supreme Judge law. I can think np more schemes than the bank er, and can beat the merchant In any kind of a game he'll name. I don't lie and I don't stesl and I ain't stnek up. What's the mstter with me, anyway?' "And of course," mused Colonel Morrison as he relighted the butt of his cigar, "of course t bad to He to him and say I didn't know. But I did. We all knew. He was too much of a good fellow. His failure to get on bothered him a good deal, apd oae day he got rourlng full ami went up aud down town telling people boar smart he was. Then his pride left him, aqd he let his whiskers grow frowsy and used his vest for a spittoon, and his eyes wa tered V, easily for man still In his forties. "He went Wast a dozen years ago about the time of Cleveland's second election, expecting to gpt a job in Ari zona and grow up wUh the 5nntry. His wife was mighty happy, and she toid our folks and th rest of tlie worn Matter With Me, Anyway?" en that xx'hen Horace got away from his old associates In this town she, knew that he would be all right. Poor Myrtle Kenwlck, the prettiest girl you cver T olonjMn the sixties and she was through here not long ago and stayed with my wife and the girls a broken old woman, going back to her kinfolk in Iowa after she left him Poor Myrtle! I wonder where she Is. I see this Arizona paper doesn't say anything about her." Colonel Morrison read over the Item again, aud smiled as he proceeded: "But it does say that be occupied many places of honor and trust; In his former home In Kansas, which- seerua to Indicate that whisky made old Samp a liar as well as a loafer at last. My, my!" sighed the colonel as he rose and put the paper on the desk, "My, my ! What a treacherous serpent It Is ! It gave l)lm a good time Uteyally a hell nf a good time. And he was a good fel low literally a damned 'good feiloxx- 'damned from here to eternity,' a your man Kipling says. God gave him every talent. He might have been a respected, useful citizen ; no honor was beyond him ; but he put aside fame and worth and happiness to play with whtsTty. My Lord, Juat think of It!" exclaimed the colonel as he' reached for his hat and put up his glasses. "And this Is how whisky served him : brought him to shame, wrecked his home, made his name a by-word, and lured hfm on and on to utter ruin by holding before' htm' the phantom of a good time. What a pitiful, heartbreak ing mocker It Is!" He sighed a long sigh as he stood In th door looking up at tbe sky xvith hia band clasped be hind him, and said half audibly as he went down the steps: "And whoso 1 deceived thereby Is not wlse-riot wise. 'He's good at ahythlng-and yet ' fool f H f That was xvhatr i'olouel Morrison gave the stenographer. What we made (or the paper Is cptirely uuinterestla aad need not be printed bar. wheai to weati Uk ta roa with ear battoatnt ta laa) bias atagad. aad tbc old Criio except sao ware baay aaa he bad TO TAJIK BAtm (TIUN WW Be Hat Bel Hateigh K Jaa S By Ibe rtatnl IVtaoi Ahrboaah a baas all HrHtmuaary rcaalaatt.ei of both aaaav ea of Ibe North i-arulltna aeaeral s- naaiaeled aad etery- I be la readmee for tire mill- to triad rt.llv are gn lac rvery tadi.-atlna that thaaaeaa of lmiirum amnnm will i ease laaut aad careful rnuatd ere Hue before aay dertolve action W takes. With -u. 1 1 aa exleaaive pros: rata, whb h If lasaeri with the defeat af aa l a few MUa wtuihl prove tiw grral a Ibunlea for Ibe treaaary anil Ibe slate mum. ist tn.iinc. nerore inem. n nntu- s-r of bTrtnlirrnm t.lv aneerte-l thai In llH-ir ..pinion a full Inresllicalion of nidi i'V"-'l would I"' made, a small and seliH-t i i in n .-n.i I and and . baaJ tbe mualuder last into tbe waste k. t of defeat. . i MorriwHi's stale imtsxl shipping mi.- proswHl. IT ailnptel. woidd exart a beary outlay of pre liminary ticiillturei. il was stated. iuiiuk the in..-: iuiirtaut uims- ures who n must lie . onsi.ierexl with tbe lliuinclal fiatt in xlew Ibe follow ing were named : Establishment of a slate medical iillege. Imrease in the nuiuher of stier.or court jialires: a sl.i.insi.iitsi bond issue for continuance of the highway construction program. Im provements sought by the several state educational institutions: chang es in the state's taxation system and method of distributing the school eiimli'.iiig fluid. I'roisisxMl reforms in the prison system. Increase in the nuralier of juvenile -ourt Judges. Measures carrying increased appro priations for various state depart ments. Bills are rapidly falling into bands of Hie clerk for reading only ;i few of them have lieen .'iifsed in detail. I ippnsltinn to steamship line will come from eastern section of I lie slate, it the bill dls iii.. the was stated, but the governor's message is expected by his friends to sweep aside much of the early criticism. While ninny legislators are willing to have a committee or commission appointed to investigate the proposal, they lire opposed, according to their statements, to granting this laxly au thority to proceed xvith organization should it be found that the measure would be practical in operation. The report of the committee, they contin ued, should be presented to (he next session for decision ns to what steps should Ik- taken. Gox'ernor Morrison and his follow ers, however, are expected lo definite legislation to place tin el; ship line in operation as soon as posslbl after the committee has reached ns leoision, if the report should be fav orable, according to observers. Members of the highway commis sion are confident their reiiiesl for a $15,000,000 bond issue will he granted. They are painting lo (he record of ibe slate in highway building during the past year, approximately MNl miles of hurdHUrfuced roads having been eom dolod. and the approval, which they maintain, the commission's policies has been given in every section. The question of establishing a state medical college and its probable loca tion is becoming one of the perplexing problems of the assembly . with legis lators holding many different opinion us to the procedure and policy to be followed in authorizing creation of the Institution. .Most of the lawmaker)" have stated that they favor establish ment of the school, but add Ihev have not yet decided on a definite plan. Several xvodanen's compensation hills are ls'ing sponsored, but an ef fort is underway, it was reported, to unite on one measure and urge its passage. The labor element is sup uorttng the measure adopted by the federation in 1021 and again approv ed last year. Says Year Satisfactory One for Equal Rights. (Br the jVssoc:atf.il I'rcRN.) Chicago, .tan. fi. Legal disabilities if women in the United Slates have, been reduced lo "a few slivers in the 'sidy politic which can he extracted' by a line needle,'' according to MrK 'othe.rine Waugh MeCullocli, a mem ber of the Chicago liar and chairman if the conunitlee on uniform legisli tion of the National Lenilge of Women Voters. "The needle xvas applied to many disabilities .through laws enacted in itrjl, and although 11122 xvas not regu larly a legislative year in most slates, eonslduble legislation to establish equal rights xvas enacted." Mrs. Mc- CuHouch slated. The legislation of 1022 which xvas regarded its conforming xvilli the pro- nm of the League, has been tabu lated for the League by Mrs. Carina 0. Warrington, an attorney at Fort Wayne. Ind., and may he surumarlMetl as follows : Federal, act pioyiiUng independent itiaenship for married women; deaf- ia. removal ol common law (Usabili ties relative to holding otfllce or per forming civil functions; Keufueky, net facilitating jury service by women, nge of consent raised to eighteen, xvife ibandonnieut made felony JfiT which 'xtradition' may he demanded, women made eligible to office.; Now Jersey, mothers' pension law amended; llbode Island, committee created to determine to what extent statutes abridge women s rights: Virginia, properly rights act passed, mothers' pension act amended, suffrage act amended to provide (bat for purposes of voting the residence of 2 m"T W,,.T" s,,n" not. 'T I'n pi m rtsn I'hn. if nor liiiwliiiiiil tX)mmisMi, on simpliiiititlon of tatt and local government niithoi'iised. TUe League opposes blunkct legisla tion. A coal urner in Fdtglaud has re tired after working in the pits tor slxty-rme years without once being away even on sick leave. When ne n one a linger lie cnuiu 10 i ic buiiux-u to have It 6et. and then went down and finished bis shift. Among the Tuuregs of Tripoli, hy il! the laws of the country, thb men have to oaey the women. DesOent Is traced 'through the mother, and tho men go veiled,. rw topped up? MENTHOLAIUM dears it. WOMAN SO ILL COULD NOT WORK DobiOwB Work, by T-kkg Lj4m LPbLnan'sVeietoisW L was ail run-down. over. I could hardly drag around, let alone do my won. I read aome letters In the papers telling what Lvdia E. Pink ham'a Veg e t a b I e Compound had done for others and 1 thought I would try it Then a man told my husband about his wife and what good It had done her and wanted him to have roe try it I nook one bottle and could see what it did for me in week 's time, and when I had taken three bottles I had gained both in strength and weight and was doing my own work. I took it before my last baby was born and it helped me so much. 1 sure am glad to recommend the VegetableCompound to any woman who Buffers from female ail ments, for I know by experience what it can do. I have used Lvdia E. Pink ham's Sanative Wash, also the Liver Pills, too, and think them fine." Mrs. Wm. Eldridge, 620 E. Grant Street Marion, Indiana. A record of nearly fifty years service should convince you of the merit of Lydia E Pinkham's Compound. Chips off -Hie 0U Block IS JUKIOR3 Little N)s One-third the regular dose. Made of the same jngreatcnta, then candy coated. For children and ndulti. (ibson Oriig Store. 3NTY0U HOPE THAT I WITH SOME SATISFACT- 5) ORV , Will the house be warm when St. Nicholas calls or will the Christmas tree room be properly heated for the kiddies when they come down to pay jtheir nightgown respects to what the Christmas tide has brought them? Let us suggest that you make the whcle family a Christmas present of per fect plumbing. E. B. GKADY Plumbing and Heating Contractors 11 Corbln St. Office Phone 334Vf ' . n . . ,.-. Ji " "" J , , " , .car of Dairy and Poultry I'eeds, the best Oil the market, j Oood Dairy Fted at $2.35. I $3.50 and $3.00 per sack. 1 r " Best Laying Mash in and 100 lb. Sacks. 25, Scratch Feed in 60 and 100 lb. Sacks. Give us your- order for the jjest Feeds Cabarrus Cash Grocery Co. l'lione 5 1 1VV. Marion, Ind-' gm Mto bent I KEEPING WELL An ffi Tablet (a vegot&blo aperient) taken at r.rr.V'.. . warn 9 60 raaajBMl3 bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbI
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Jan. 9, 1923, edition 1
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