PAGE FOUR
1 j, b. BHBRBLLL
|W. K. BHEHRIIl P Editor
P MEMBER OF THE "
, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tha Associated Preaa to axahnnvely
entitled to tne dm foe republics tion of
t- an q««s credited to it or not otherwise
• credited in this paper and also the lo
[ aal news published herein.
AS rights of republication of spec
if lal dispatches herein are also reserved.
Special Representative
JOST, LANDIS A KOHN
Fifth Avenue, New York
Ms das Building, Chicago
M 1004 Ccndler Building, Atlanta
Entered as second class mail matter
1 at the postoffice at Concord, N. C., un
; der the Act of March 3, 1879.
': r ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES
In the City of Concord by Carrier:
s One Year , $6.00
t its Months 3.00
t; three Months 4 1.50
- One Month .150
■ Outside of the State the Subscription
I* Is the Same as in the City
Out of the city and by mail in North
' ' Carolina the following prices will pre
* trail:
One Year $5.00
I Six Months 2.50
« . Three Months , 1.25
j > Less Than. Three Months, 50 Cents a
Month
[' All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in
Advance
1 RAILROAD SCHEDULE
In Effect Jan. 30, 1926.
Northbound
No. 40 To New York 9 :28 P. M.
No. 136 To Washington 5:05 A. M.
No. 36 To New York 10 :25 A. M.
! No. 34 To New York 4:43 P. M.
No. 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M.
, No. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P. M.
No. 32 To New York 9:03 P. M.
s No. 30 To New York 1:55 A. M.
• Southbound
~Ko. 45 To Charlotte 3:45 P. M
_No. 35 To New Orleans 9:56 P. M.
: No. 29 To Birmingham 2 :35 A. M
No. 31 To Angusta 5:51 A. M.
No. 33 To New Orleans 8:15 A. M.
~ No. 11 To Charlotte 8:00 A. M
. No. 135 To Atlanta 8:37 P. M
" No. 39 To Atlanta 9:50 A. M.
1 No. 37 To New Orleans 10:45 A. M.
Train No. 34 will stop in Concord
to take on passengers going to Wash
. ington and beyond.
... Train No. 37 will stop here to dis
charge passengers coming from be
yond Washington.
Ail trains stop in Concord except
. No. 38 northbound.
|\jkBIBI£THOUGHT|
J FOR TODAY—I
ill Bible Thoughts memorized, will prove • [ii
IB! v oricelesa.heritage in after years. jgj
LIKE PRODUCES LIKEBe
not deceived; God is not mocked: for
whatsoever a man soweth. that shall
he also reap.—Galatians 6:7.
THE HEALTHIEST PLACE TO
LIVE.
For some reason, never fully ex
plained, but nevertheless accepted, the
rural communities have always been
considered more healthful than the
••teities.
That this assumption Is not correct
was first demonstrated publicly when
the United States drafted men for
military service in the World War.
[ People were astonished to learn that
there were more physical defects
among the rural youths than among
the youths reared in the cities.
- People have always regarded the
“great out doors” as the healthiest
place in the world. There is less pop
vulatiqn there, it has been argued, loss
[congestion and less chances for disease
to spread. There is nothing to such
an opinion. Recent statistics show
that the death rate, the country over.
Vis higher in the rural sections than in
the cities.
Taking note of what these statistics
[revealed, the. Rockefeller Foundation
seized upon tlie opportunity of saving
some further things about the mat
ter that are of pertinence and of in
terest, remarking that “the idea that
S rural life is inherently wholesome and
healthful has ail the vitality of a
popular legend. The crystal waters
, of the old family well, the gymnasium
apparatus of plow and hoe and saw.
the fresh food from field, garden, and
..dairy, the constant outdoor life, the
men tal serenity which comes from
[contact with nature, have been so
-lyrically extolled by orators, chiefly
urban, that it is hard to convince the
man on the street that the farmer
and his family are not healthier than
' ~city folk.
Vj*;' “Yet there are many facts which
[’[point in quite the opposite direction.
-An examination of a half million
'school children proved that physical
- defects occur more frequently in rural
-pupils than in urban. Since 1910 the
[New York rural death-rate has been
■ higher than that of cities.”
B&'. In a Western university an exami
i nation of 3,748 male students was
| made and the results showed a great
er degig-c of health among the stu
pa dents who had been reared in cities of
more than 50.000 population than of
: - those in any other classification. “It
,i* is a well-known fact,” says f United
health official, “that the nat
ifStnral advantages which the rural dis
llß’tricts possess are more than offset by
Katbe better health protection afforded
gnfce city dweller.”
B Country people are paying more at
>i, -trillion now to sanitation and health
p| conditions in general titan they for
raeriy did. Too many of them in the
Sj, past apparently have lived ou the as
gspuniption that because they : were
in the country they could be
|p caress; hMlth habits.
UfoST Jtorth; , for instance.
■ futility nurses ' and phfsieians are
M employed in nigny [coliptie* and they
are spending most .of their time and
Kxtexpepding most'of'their energies in
Rirural sections. Once the people in
country learn to take the same
» precautions as the city dweller takes
, they will become healthier. The
freshness of the air is a big asset to
them if they learn to offset the dan
f gers of carelessness.
THE “DIE-HARDS” STILL FIGHT
t ING.
t Those Senators who oppose,the en
trance of the United States "into the
. activities of the World Court are still
. fighting. They have asked the Unit
■ed States Supreme Court to invali
date the act of Congress by which this
nation takes part in the work 'of the
court.
The suit has not been entered by a
[ Senator but just the same the “die
. hards” in the Senate undoubtedly are
behind the Washington lawyer who
did enter the suit. He holds that the
action of the Senate was unconstitu
: tional and therefore unlawful.
[ It's a pity the people of the United
[ States can’t vote on such questions as
) this. There is no doubt about public
i sentiment, yet we find a handful of
men in Washington trying to isolate
1 the United States. If the public had
been opposed to the resolution pro-
I posing American participation in the
• court affairs the Senators would have :
| known it. As a matter of fact public
opinion was so one-sidedly in favor
of the resolution that one opponent ;
wanted an investigation to see where
all of the pro-court “propaganda” was
coming from. 1
— — i
FIVE INJURED WHEN 1
TRUCK STRIKES AUTO 1
Accident at Locust. Stanly County. 1
.John Snotherly. of New London.
is Dead.
Albemarle. Feb. B.—Five persons. 1
occupants of a Ford automobile were
seriously hurt near lax-ust, Stanly
. county, last night when the machine
■in which they were riding collided
with a large truck loaded with cot
ton. The injured are Mr. and Mrs-
Grady Simpson, of Kannapolis: R.
L. Barbee. Misses Aerie and Alice
■ Smith, of Stanfield. AH suffered
j serious injures except Mrs. Simpson,
whose injuries were not so severe.
The truck is said to have been from
. Gastonia, but its owner and the
. name of the driver have not been
learned here.
The two Smith girls were badly
cut and bruised and it is believed 1
that Mr. Barbee suffered a fractured
skull. The injured were nlshed to
Tally Brunson hospital here, but one
of the five was able to leave todny.
The Ford ear was demolished.
The funeral service for John
Snotherly, who died at New London
tliis morning will be held here to
l morrow at 11 a. m. The services will
be conducted at First Methodist
Protestant church, 'of which the de-
I ceased was a member. Mr. Snotherly
lived here for a nunibre of years un
til the death of his wife a year ago.
since which time he has been spend
ing most of his time with relatives,
he was a prominent citizen and one
of the best known men in this coun
ty. He was about 78 years old.
Salvation Through Search.
Dearborn Weekly:
Tlie prophets of today are working
with blue pripts and diagrams.
Some of the greatest prayers of to
day are being prayed in Laboratories
by Scientists.
The great faith of this day is
being demonstrated where men stake
their lives on a chance discovery in a
laboratory; or build great Service
stations called hospitals; or study
the difficulties that develop in our
ramshackle economic system.
Salvation through Search is a
thought worth pondering. The en
gineers. the scientists, the explorers,
't hr aviators, the airplane builders
and pioneers, are the Prophets of to
day.
The True Scieiftiest demonstrates
the great faith ou earth, thougn he
may call it something else.
He works and he lives in a realm
of faith- He reach! - out into the un
known with Faith as his only spur
and guide. All scientific discoveries
are founded oil a tremendous Faith
ill law,and order, and tutb.
The other day a missionary-doctor
carried home ten billion germs in his
body. Hi- knew that tlie only way to
get them to an American laboratory
in order to study them was to
swallow them ami bring them home.
There were no facilities in China to
study them. He was coming home on
a vacation. The laws would not per
mit his bringing them in any other
way. So. tlie day before, he swallow
ed a million or so, and started for
home.
This is the spirit of modern
, science. It is a science of faith.
Loss of Cow’s Cud.
The Pathfinder,
Question: What is meant by say
ing a cow loses her cud? If a cow
loses her cud does she die unless an
artificial cud is given her? Where
does the cow s cud go when she loses
1 it?
Answer: When a cow cats, the food
is not at first thoroughly chewed but
passes immediately into a large eom
i partuient of tlie stomach known as
the paunch. Later while tlie animal
is standing or lying down this food is
i regurgiated from the paunch to die
. mouth and l-emasticated. This quid
: or returned bolus of food in the cow’s
mouth is called tile cud. The pro
-1 cess of remasticatiort is known as ru
-mi nation. The so-called loss of the
. cud is simply tlie cessation of rumi
, nation—the food ceases to be returned
| from tlie paunch to the mouth. This
is frequently one of the first indica
tions of sickness in any kind of riimi.
mint animal, since ruminafits gener
-1 ally stop chewing the cud when they
feel muck out of condition. Rurai
- nation will be resumed when the ani
- togl returns to a state of ‘ normal
> health. The department of ugrieul
e ture says a cow regains her cud
\yfeepi reqiuiuatioii is resumed .and she
quiuot bp giten gn artifeiai cud. vi "
An Artist
’ “That photographer is an artist.’’
” "In what way?”
1 “He makes portraits of you not an
l you really lot*, but as you hope you
e really look."
.Captains Idaho Cage Team
MS,
Presenting Neal Nelson, captain of the
team. He’s exceptionally fast, accurate passer apd a clever shot. Idaho f
fom. r him jiiu of the beet eager* the school has had In seasons
PONZI ARRESTED. '
Is Held By Florida Grand Jury on
Fraud Charges.
Jacksonville. Fla., Feb. Bs—Char
les Ponzi, of Massachusetts, to
gether with three associates -fn ihe
Charpon Land Syndicate, was indict
ed late today by a Florida grand
jury oil four counts alleging viola
tioins of "declaration of trust” laws.
The true bill was returned by the
Duval county grand jury. 'The syndi
cate is at present offering for sale
principally property in Columbia
county, southwest of Lake City. •
Those indicted with Ponzi were:
Rosa Maria Ponzi. his wife; Emma
Alviti and her husband, Caleemlonia
Alviti.
All ..four indicted on four counts
under the Florida act of 1923 regu
lating peitons doing business under
a declaration of trust; offering cer
tificates of indebtedness for sale
without filing proper declaration of
trust: selling tertitientes of indebted
ness without procuring from the
State comptroller and attorney-gen
eral a permit to offer for sale or
selling certiticat«i of indebtedness,
and failure to pay license fee of
$l5O for a declaration of trust
Each count upon conviction car
ries a sentence of two years in the
prison or fine of SI,OOO.
Ponzi pecame internationally
known through his dealings ill inter
national reply coupons in Boston in
1920. He was sentenced to five years
in jail after his conviction in United
States district court and was re
leased in the Spring of 1925.
Hi- now is under sentence of
seven years in the Massachusetts
penitentiary for tlie erne offense and
is out on bond pending the outcome
of an appeal.
Ponzi came to Florida last Octo
ber with avowed intention oc .enter?.,
ing the land selling field to recoup
his “lost fortune” and pay his Now
England creditors. He estimated that
he still owed approx irately $2,000,-
000.
It is said that the-original line
of the Chicago & Northwestern
Railway was financed largely
through the sale of potatoes.
SALES MANAGER
One who lias managed house-to
house salesmen, or ex perieneed sales
man capable of handling position
wanted by large manufacturer for
this city and surrounding territory.
Products are actual necessities, and
steady repeaters. We pay your of
fice rent and advertising. Position
pays $50,000 to sloojoo a week. IVrite ,
giving full particulars concerning (
yourself, experience, reference, efc.
All applications held confidential. Ad
dress General Sales Manager. Apart
ment 0, 2700 Broadway Avenue, Dor-!
montj Pittsburgh, Pa.
Feb. 5 4 %?. |
1 |kl ■
ENDURANCE
Children and grown people
Apadily increase in vigor and
indurance when
Scott’s Emulsion
ot Invigorating cod-liver oil
* taken regularly. It is rich,
/iltamin-tested nourishment
[hat builds health and jhjK
strength. Start taking
Scott’s Emulsion today! -4JL
AT RETAIL DRUGGISTS
PH» 60* ul $1.20
Mpscott A fiewne. Bloomheld. N. J. 25-25 MR
Cod Liver Oil
Best with Iron
\ to Build You Up
Ejhay to Take in New Tablet Form
How I o Order at the Drug Store
If thin, weak, nervous or ritn-do*n.
tMMIs nothing better for you than Cod
Liver Oil and Iron
Iron produces rich, red Mood and cod |
- liver oil builds stamina, solid fte&b, strong !
[ muscles and nerve force. And bow you
cap have cod liver oil without the fishy
I taato- Fur chemists now extract from
the oil the vita.ml nes and ether tlesh
! hidlyllng. strength-diving elements. Theso
are combined with Iron in oasy-to-tako
table* form. Specify Burke's Cod Livflr
du and Iron Tablets in ordering from
■ vOtir druggist You'll soon feel a* if Von
aad a gnw.Toimgor, weil-noumUhod body.
i ' •-[••
i Far sale by (jUbsoo Drug Stor»
THfi CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE
CUT PRICES AND
INCREASE WAGES
Henry Ford TeHs How tot Check
Threatened Business Depression
New York. Feb. B.—Tlie way to
check a threateml business depres
sion is to cut prices ami increase
wages. Henry Ford says in an inter
view published in the current issue
of Collier’s Weekly.
"It is good business,” said Mr.
Ford, “a I way to raise wages and
never to lower them- Higher wages
and lower prices mean greater power
—more customs.”
The theory that the light price
for a commodity is "what the traf
fic will bear,” and the right wage is
"the lowest suui a iiian will work
for” is an unsound one. the auto
mobile manufacturer believes. “The
right price is the price an article
can steadily be sold for,” he statedi
■‘and the right wage is the wage the
employer can steadily pay.”
Mr. Ford maintains that skillful
management can always find ways of
increasing wage rates, and that it
(Bag-overs waste elimination and
other economical methods of opoM
tion iu process.
“Any attempt to fix a ‘living
wage’.” continued Mr. Ford, “is an
insult to the intelligence to N both
managers and workers. This implies
that all men are alike. Fortunately
they are. Only a few case to live This
year as they lived last year ”
In conclusion Mr. Ford gave his
definition of service:
“I define service as the low cost
production of high grade goods by
well paid labor and distributed at a
profit. No man can really claim to be
in business unless he lias equipped
himself to attain their objectives.
There can be uo true prosperity un
til the worker on 411 ordinary com
modity con buy what lie makes.”
- . (
The marigold was named in honor’
of Queen Mary of England.
1 J—Jl L -. ... .! J --
SAYS RED PEPPER ||
HEAT STOPS PAIN
IN FEW MINUTES
Rheumatism, lumbago, neuritis,
backache, stiff neck, sore muscles,
strains, sprains, aching joints. When
you are suffering bo you can hardly
: get around, just try Red Pepper Rub.
I Nothing has such concentrated,
1 penetrating heat as red peppers, and
| when heat penetrates right down into
I pain and congestion relief comes at
once.
Just as soon as you apply Red Pep
per Rub you feel the tingling heat.
In three minutes the sore spot is
warmed through through and the
torture is gone.
Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made from
red peppers, costs little at any drug
store. Get a jar at once. Be sure to
get the genuine, with the name Rowles
on every package.
BILIOUSJTTACKS
From Which Kentucky Man Suf
fered Two or Three Times a
Mouth, Relieved by
Black-Draught.
Lawrenceburg, Ky.—Mr. J. P.
Neving, a local coal daaler and far
mer, about two years ago learned
of the value of Thedford’s Black-
Draught liver medicine, and now
he says:
“Until then I suffered with se
vere bilious attacks that came on
two or three times each month.
I would get nauseated. I would
have dizziness and couldn’t work.
“I would take pills until I was
worn-out with them. I didn’t seem
to get relief. After taking the pills
my bowels would act a couple or
three times, then I would be very
constipated,
“A neighbor told me of Black-
Dradght and I began its use. I
never have fodnd so much relief
las it gave me. I would not be
without it for anything.
“It seemed to. cleanse ms whole
system and make me feel like new.
I would take a tow doses—get rid
i ! of the bile ahd hav* my usual clear I
head; feel full of •pep’ and could
r<s f&JtSL* .»««.
ft — draught'!
jItBIAW* 1 l|V$R MEDICINEJ
KJiai
OWRI*M HU Wnw ■«•. Plrtorw. Inc
"Satan In Sables” with Lowell Sherman Is a plcturlzatlon of this novel '
BTNOPBIB \ *
, Prince Michael Yervedoff. wealthy
Ruieiaa philanderer In Paris, be
tomes interested in Colette, an
tnworWy poor girl, tchom he pro
jects from her Apache brother-in
, ate. Meanwhile, Michaels innocent
' ioung brother, Paul, is vamped for
revenge by Dolores, one of Mich
| lei’s cast-offs. Michael, tired of his
useless life and parasitical friends,
! finds a change in a simple picnic to
j Versailles with Colette.
I
CHAPTER Vlll—Continued
“Never," he marvelled, “have 1
seen in the artfully shaded lights
| on the glittering walls of the finest
cases, or on the naked bosoms and
backs of the women there, any-
I thing so beautiful—as—as that —"
IHe could only point. Inarticulate,
to the quivering pools and patches
traced by broken shafts of sun
light on the leaf-carpeted floor of
Ihe forest.
Colette was primly Intolerant:
‘Paris—the case not as God
meant the ■'"world to be, Monsieur
Michael. He made the trees for
eirds, the woods for animals, caves
lor people. He never -made cases
ind cabarets and houses—especial
ly houses like mine!”
Her philosophy was not bitter,
not complaining just wistfully
puzzled. With shining face up
turned to the warm touch of a long
Snger of sunlight. Colette seemed
in unreal part of a fairy tale as
she stood there like a bright elf —
ind Michael, the man-of-the-world,
stood In awe of Colette, the visible
“f feel as_ though l could combat
the whole world."
representative on earth of the God
of-the-world.
•’We’re Big Babes in the Woods!"
he repeated in wondering playful
ness.
Unconsciously, they were hold
ing hands npw as they walked
blithely among the trees: unno
ticed, the hours dissolved one into
ihe next like a timeless dream
Magically, it seemed, the noontide
was at hand.
In a remote clearing, where the
grassy hanks v/ere warm under the
midday sun, they paused for lunch
Mlohael arranged things with gay
tplomb; Colette served with no
iess elaborate merriment.
In all her life Colette had never
been so happy, she confided gently
to Michael.
He was pleasantly Impressed by
the daintiness of the lunch she had
to hastily prepared—the thinness
»f the sandwiches, the neat way
In which everything was done up in
tissue paper and carefully tied.
The true refinement of Colette’s na
ture was gradually revealing itself
to him; the sterling soundness of
her character, too, underneath the
Inherent gaiety and exuberance of
youth.
Hopelessly captured, he studied
her as she talked and ate —there
was about her a genuine whole
tomeness, a frankness of mind, a
certain * straightforwardness that
made her very attractive. The gay
tittle Columbine of perpetual laugh
and twinkling feet was fast disap
pearing; and in her stead was a
level-eyed, serious girl always
happy, yes, but with deeper moods
and surer appreciation of life than
ma would have ascribed to the
"premier dandeuse of the Rue
Chalgrin”.
Between bites, she light-hearted
ly described the decided change in
Smile’s disposition.
“Why, M’sleu, overnight he be
came almost human." she laughed.
“His experience with you cowed
him. All his boasting and threats
were gone. That name you men
tlopad —lDwtdl tne— mantn nd to off ant
■llll4. ,'.."-4. 1 -T._ . i.
Kapirt) Dazed.
Dearborn Weekly.
Ope of the ncknow;edgo:l honest
agencies of the Government has been
the Federal ’Q-ude Cpiiiniixxioii. It
b*« approximated the ideals of % “un
fear, no favor” in the investigation
of JHisintwx evilrt of this v country.
When, llp-tcfore. ihe 1 Ciunroisidou
rfptfrts tSdt (jertnin, cooperative ' ns-
Hpelationo have been badly misman
aged- it commands attention.
The case irf this: Aaron Najiiro’o
tobacco, cooperatives (like his "other
efforts) had failed miserably. Aaron '
blamed it on the tobacco trust' and j
' 'ft [ Co*""” ■
him strangely. Who Is Dechlne,
M'sieu, and why is Emile so afraid
of him?"
"t am not free to tell you now.
Colette," Michael answered, after
a pause. “I met Dechine under
rather peculiar circumstances.
Some day 1 will tell you the whole
story. In the meantime, my law
yer thinks there will not be much
difficulty in having Billy legally
entrusted to your cage. He is tak
ing the matter up now and in a
- days it all will be settled!”
‘How good you are, M’sieu! 1
don’t know why you are taking so
much trouble over me. 1 only hope
that some day 1 can repay you foi
helping to make my dreams come
true." She sighed, averting her
eyes shyly to the idle task of
plucking grassblades, continuing
softly: "My air castles have tum
bled so many times that I was
beginning to lose hope. You
know, onb can stand repeated dis
appointments and discourage
ments only Sb far; then ope
prepares to g}ve up the battle
and resign oneself to the inevi
table, for the fighting spirit be
comes crashed. I was very near
that stage, M’sieu, when you came
into my life. And now —why, I feel
as though 1 could combat the whole
world."
She stood up, spread out her
arms and raised a shining face to
the sky. Her little figure was en
graved under her clinging dress by
the etching wind.
A day since Michael would have
been conscious that his admiration,
of her body was prbfane; today
he felt as_clean as that very wind.
"I'm glad that I have been of
some help to you, my dear, and af
ter we get this matter of Emile
settled, I’ll see what I cafi do about
helping you and Billy to spend a
month or so In the country this
summer!"
- “You will go away yourself?" sK
asked.
"1 don't know!” To talk abofi
himself made him dull * agai*
"There is no place that particulai
'.y interests me any more while ml
frame of mind—” He- shruggel
and fell silent.
Colette sensed the unfavorabW
. change in his inner mood: sh<
could see that he was not happy,
that something tortured his mind,
though outwardly he remained
pleasant.
"M'sieu," she said, crouching
daintily beside him, “you bars
brought so much happiness inti
my drab little life that 1 want ta
Help you! You are not happy, that
is very evident Can’t I help 1 : You
told me the other night that per
haps 1 could—some time. Cant
that 'spine time' be now?”
Michael took her hands into his
“You are helping me a lot jus(
by being with me and cheering me.
Sometimes a mental bond of syra
pathy accomplishes as much as ac
tual words or deeds! Yet—you ar«
right. The time has come for m<
to seek your sweet, practical help."
Somehow, he found himself tell
mg her everything—of his assail
with Dolores, ills quarrel with
Paul, and of the outcome of hit
talk with Dolores.
Michael did not spare hlmseK
before the bar of this young gtrl't
opinion: he complained bitterly o',
his lit? —the laxltude and the idle
ness of it. with no ambition, no
gcal.
“1 have nobody to blame excep!
myself," he went on, "but the blot
jvill fall hardest on the one 1 hav<
always tried to shield the most."
“Do you really think that Mai
eaapiselle Dolores Is doing thfc
solely in a spirit of revenge?" C#
iette asked. i
Michael was positive. "V know
Dolores, and l know what her its ,
teutions are. I suppose that 1
haven’t played .the game with hel
as I should, but she/is paying -fat
back in good measure."
"Did you really kr,ow» that shg
loved you?" she asked, after (
moment.
"She says that she did. I de-a 1 *
believe her. and I think that timu
will bear me out. She mistake!
piqued pride for love. 1 am 3ur«
our relationship was just an affair
like many others she has undoubt
edly had."
"Aad—did you love her, M’sieu?’'
Colette's voice wks low with sup
pressed anxiety, and she pulled s
single cool slip of grass.
“No, I did not! 1 liked her, yes
—for she is beautiful, clever, an«
has a certain fascination ant
charm. But k was a butterfly ro
mance, never destined to last
Surely she knew that as well as I!’
Colette spoke slowly, thought
fully: “Perhaps she did not fevep
her love for you, but hid it uudei
her cloak of gayety.”
“Then j*e has chosen a strang*
way of showing it now!"
Yotf cannot blame a woman foj
resorting to any method sht
chooses, In order to gaiiy her end
Colette said softH-, "ana Dolores
probably hop_ea that she will
able so win you back again in spits
of yourself. Are—you sure thal
you have no— affection—for her?"
Mfchael’e eyes sought and hek
hera steadfaatly.
fT/1 ha continued! .
i-g'-W m_- <3=Hl' a __J. -JIU. I. —1 _L '
linked for un investigation of the
trust, as the cauw of the difficulty
within This in
vestigation was undertaken with the
result that inisunanugeuient was
given aa the cause of the condition of
the Hapiro cooperatives. Whereupon
the tools of Sapiro met ill Washing
ton-to asHttii the Cotiwuission. Iff
will not succeed. Truth-" may have
hard sledding in America these days,
out it eventually nrrivt*i.
The sun, moon and earth will be
[in a direct line at a certain nour ou
| August u, vm.
l
BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. P
Good Furniture Is Aii
Investment
You cannot put your money into Anything that will \
bring greater returns in happiness to yourself, your fam
ily, your friends. i
' It will pay interest far every day of your life. \ I
It builds character in children. \Jt strengthens your J
backbone to do. x
It is within your reach—you can afford it—dn fact, ! !
with a store like ours-—filled with it—you cannot afford to ] [
be without it. If you are planning to buy Furniture, we ] [
invite you to see our Wonderful Lines.
BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. y ;
;! NUNN & BUSH OXFORDS > !
ij> Snappy Styles in Spring Oxfords Are Ready—Come-in !j!
and Let Us Show You \ \
j RICHMOND -FLOWE CO.
Now Yon Can Have Frigidaire
New models, new low prices and con
venient terms now place automatic elec
tric refrigeration within rpach of every _
home. Investigate today .
STANDARD BUICK COMPANY
Display Room* 47 So. Union St.
Phone 876 or 363
J. B. RAIFORD, Salesman
Irlgtdafire
iltm MB. MS GET RtSHLTS
Extra Votes on
California
CONTEST on all
bilk paid by Feb.
10th. Each dollar
gives you 500 votes.
PEARL DRUG
CO.
/ v .V • >
Phone. 22-722
'i*
\ Jr J' v
Monday, February 8, i§26
••fBVIIW.'L,'."W. twill I MUII ■ mu Od
IN Vovm. MIND • > *
pfcWFier pLUMßiwe
v\t.Re You'll pinp V*
Perfect Plumbing is the only _
kind that belongs in your
home. Dependable fixtures
W9II set up are < the kind that
\ 1
need but little attention during
the years to come v at
tend to your plumbing matters.
CONCORD PLUMBING
COMPANY
mg.rr C* PhA.. S7C