PAGE TWO BtENNY COLUMN ■auras' Black Minorca ■MBferel.* Charles G. Pape strain. 99m. D. *Y. Krimminger, Scute 5, i Concord.- 16-lt-t>. ft»4ng*nn> CkweouX Coate—Men's, s,. boys’ girls. Any price. See pOovington’s. 16-lt-p. Mgtatocs—Car Load Those Good Yes- Enfow sweat potatoes just arrived. iiPhdae 563. Ed. M. took Com pyeny J 15-2 t-p. ■qr Bur Quart Jars of Plain Queen pofives. ©nly 75c a quart. Lippard f & Barrier 16-lt-p. garden Seed—A Complete Stock. 9c B a package. Gibson Drug Store. . ISctf-c. . Kresh Green Cabbage, Turnips, Let tuce, celery and carrots. I’hone 565. B Ed. M. Cook Company. la-2t-p. for Sale —Two Six Room Houses on i‘ Fast Depot street. large lots. Five room both* on Fink street near No. 2 school.; 3 room house on North : Crowell -street; 6 room house on North Crowell street, lot 70x1(10 1 feet ; 8 five room houses hear Locke ni.nl 'these are all good bargains on easy terms. Six room house tor rent on East Depot street. Three acres of land on Allison street. Jno. i K. Patterson, Agent. 15-2 t-x. I Garden Seed —A Complete Stock. 3c! a package. Gibson Drug Store. 15-ts-c. For Rent—Stx Room House on East Depot street. Jno. K. Patterson, | Agent. 15-2 t-x. My Residence on Bell Avenue, for rent. Six rooms and bath.' Mrs. i C. C. Caldwell. 11-ts-x. j Printing-- Instruction—Noting Men or young women can fu themselves for permanent posit’ons at good wages by learning some branch of the printing trade. There is a growing demand for young, well trained workers. Our school teach es hand composition, proof reading, press work, linotype and monotype operating and mechanism. Requires from six. to eihgt months. A good education is necessary. No night classes. .School operates eight hours each'day, except Saturday. Full particulars are found in our cata logue which we send free if you ask for it. Southeastern School of Printing, 508 Union Street, Nash | ville, Tenn. 29-ts-p. j The Timex-Tribune Job Office Keeps £ on hand a large stock of everything needed in the line of printing, and j can serve you on short notice, ts. 1 TWO MEN ARRESTED I Sfe CAN’T STAND QUIZZING! Roy Oaks and Fred Odell Gel in !’ Trouble— One Alleged Deserter,; Other Bond Skipper, j Salisbury, Feb. 15.—Roy Oaks and Fred Odell, white men got them selves in a..peck of trouble here to day in denying knowledge of a de serted enri* at Karbeib’ junction. They admitted having ridden a freight train into Barber and trans ferring there to a passenger train for Salisbury. After being held for hobo ing on their own admission, Oaks stated he was an army deserter and .Odell admitted skipping a $250 bond at Marioin? where he was wanted for an Both statements were verified by*, officers, and Oaks was taken to e«»np Bragg and Odell was l-ettmetj to 'Marion officers. Deputy Rankin fojjjid at Barbers that the ear that ggoused suspicions of eiti '*ens belonged to a section worker who parkM it near the depot for the day. *No Trespassing” Notices, 20 Cents a U dozen, at Times-Tribune Office. *° (X B>oboooaooooooooooooooooodoo<Mxx>ooooooooooo©oe j; | Unsurpassed Values I in All Departments I Efird’s February Sale -- ft l Now Going On M^t<^Wiooao^'QßrtliWßQ»OßßuußuD«aooaaiiwuuo - For Rent—S I nfurnlsheJ Rooms For light housekeeping suitable for couple or ladies. 186 North Union Street. Call Mi. 16-4 t-p. Ford Wiring, Timers, Spark Plugs, coils, parts, etc. C. Covington. V IRlt-p. Found on Young Street—-License number fttd tire carrier. Ownel can get Same b>- paying a reward and for ad. Tribune, 16-2 t-x. Found—A Bands of Key* Tribune. tf-jU-x- Spccial—Chair Seats, Wood or Fibre siaes. Priced fifteen to tweutyrfive cents. C. Patt Covington. 16-lt-p. Hundred Pounds Nice Fresh Shelled pecans and ttlmonds. Lippard & Barrier. 16-lt-p. Barred Rock Eggs For Hatching, lll6 1 for $1 Mrs. H. A. Graeber. 15-3 t-p. Photographs of “Our Sunday Gang” now on sale. See Mr. Blanks or Boyd IV. Cox Studio. 15-3 t-p. Garden Seed—A Complete Stock. Sc a package. Gibson Drug Store. 15-ts-c. | | For Sale—Six Piece Breakfast Room' | suite and small refrigerator, good as j i new. at real bargain. S. IV Pres- j | lar. 15-2 t-p. | Moving; Hauling! Local or Long Dis i tance. Phone 159 R. E. C. Turner, j 15-st-p. , Help Wanted—Weekly Pay Goes Hjgb i for the best operators. You can get a good start in four months, j j Big demand. Men or womens Num i erous graduates making top pay j ' after experience. Write for Pros-1 pectus showing how you can learn the Linotype and Intertype. Ad dress Macon Printing School. Geor- j gia-Alabama Business College Bldg., j Macon, Georgia. 11-6-p. j Lawn Mowers Sharpened and Re- j paired, also all kinds of circular 1 saws, butcher knives, sausage mills. : or other tools that are to be ground ! or filed. R. 1,. Duval, 203 South Poplar Street, Charlotte. N C. | 11-26 t-c. j Engraved Wedding Invitations and announcements on short notice at Times-Tribune office. We repre- j sent one of the best engravers in , the United States. ts. Mourning Cards Kept In Stock at The Times-Tribune Job Office and | can be printed on a few hours no ! tice. ts. it. - !■■ _ ! | Rainbow Trout ami Bass. A statement received by tii*< paper from the State Department of Fish eries says that it will have for dis-j itribution this year from the several j butcheries about i ,800.000 brook and 1 1 rainbow trout and about a half mil-1 ' iion bass. Besides those fish the de- I partment will be given flie output of j the Federal hatchery at Eden ton, which will include about bass and millions of shad. Those who may desire fish to stork private ' ponds or lukos or to ptaee ru streams • should file their applications at ' once, says the nut? addressed to this I paper, as requests will be filled in 1 order of receipt. Should it not be pos -1 sible to fill all requests for young i fish this year, applications on file 3 will be filled first next season, ft is s expected that several requests will be ' sent from this count. Application ? blanks may be secured from the - Fisheries Commission office. More r head City, N. C. r St. Jbhn Ervine, the celebrated dramatist and critic, has inaugurated! i a campaign against faulty speak ing of English on the stage. f frl AND ABOUT THE CITY | j “PAY-UP” DRIVE FOR DAVIDSON IS PLANNED Effort Wifi Be Made to Collett the Coos ■ J. A Chnnen, of Concord, was pres ent Monday •$ a meeting of the execu tive eommltfee of Davidson College, at frkjtti time it was decided to insti tute a “pay-up” campaign td cotnplete a $175,000 increasO in the endowment fun® of the' iofegif. Only aboui $45,000 of that sum is needed to complete the fund, accord ing to Dr. AV. L. Lingle, of Rich mond. Va., chairman of the board. The trustees have about SBO,OOO in sight at the present time and will re ceive a gift of $75,000 from the gen eral board of education at New York upon the collection of $125,000 through private subscriptions. Efforts of the board win be con centrated on the collection of a large number of unpaid pledges subscribed in a similar campaign two years ago. If the total of these can be col lected, the resultant sum will approxi mate that desired. Dr. Lingle stated. The college recently received the j installment of Davidson’s share of the Duke endowment, amounting to $15.- | 486.30. which will be used in com | pletion of the tend. ; Tile endowment fund, if obtained, • will result among other things in an j increase in the faculty of the institu | tion next year, it was stated. Other business discussed included j the report of AV J. Martin, president j of Davidson, which showed an enroll ; ment for the year of 642. North I Carolinians at the institution totaled 366. while the remainder included ! representatives of 21 states and two . foreign countries. The executive committee is qyn l posed of Mr. Cannon, of Concord; - Dr. Bryon Cutrk. of Salisbury; S. A. Robinson, of Gastonia; R. A. Dunn, ! Henry Beik and H. N. Pharr, all of; i Charlotte, and Dr. Lingle. I KANNAPOLIS MAN KEPT REPORT ON WEATHER j R. H. Holdbrooks Gives Report Cov ering Weather Conditions in Kan- ; napolis For Year. According to a report just made by | It. H. Holdbrooks. of Kannapolis, j rain fell in Kannapolis during 138, j days in 1925. This report is applies i l»le to Concord also Mr/ Holdbrooks j tlrnks, the two towns being so close j together. | Mr. Holdbrooks kept an accurate | ’"'-'ord from day to day. he reports. «1 finds the following facts from his rejxirt : During January, 1925, there were six days when min fell for 24 hours: on May first it rained all night .wtfiT on August first it rained during the entire day. Rain fell on 14 days in January, !12 days in February, 10 days in j March, 12 days in April, 11 days in May. 11 days in June. 6 da.vs in July. ■ 10 days in August. 14 days lA Mep- I tember. 14 days ill October, 12 days I in November ami 12 day* in Decera- I her. DR. BUCHANAN GIVES children Examination Examines Children Piaeeil in Nutri tion Classes in Schools of the City. In an effort to determine the causes for their under-development, children who have recently been placed ill the nutrition classes in the various schools of the city an* being examined now by I)r. 8. E. Buchanan, county health officer. In many instances, I)f. Buchanan states, the underweight children are found so be suffering from some trouble that can be easily remedied, j AA’hile improper food is the cause of some of the trouble, Dr. Buchannn finds that bad teeth, bad tonsils nnd other ailments are causing most of the trouble for the youngesters. “AA'bil? it is necessary that these children be given proper food and plenty of it." Dr. Buchanan stated, "it is also necessary that they be ex amined for any physical ailment that may contribute to their under-develop meitt.” Little “Sonny Boy" Songer. The Miami Herald has the following in regard to little Noel Songer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Noel N. Songer, of Miami, whose death occurred recently as a result of having a knife stuck in his eye: "Sonny Boy" Songer, ns he was known in the family and among the group of friends who loved him, was an interesting little fellow. The Son | gers are an old-fashioned couple, the i kind that live for each other. The 1 ; little form is hidden away under a flower-covered mound and it is a deso late home that is left. I am remem bering sometirng I heard a wise old preacher tell a friend of mint when her son died and he was helping to bury him. He kept saying, “where the treasure is, there will the heart he al so.” There is no stronger magnet to draw tfie heart of a man and a woman 1 heavenward than the spirit of a lit tle child —one of those of whom the master said. “Ctf such is the Kingdom of Heaven.” The little fellow was a grandson of Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Ridenhour, of Concord. Deeds Recorded Here Monday. Among the deeds recorded at the court house Monday were four from the Concord Bonded AA’arehouse and Realty/ Co. to Mrs. A. P. Furr for the transfer of real estate in No. 11 township. N’o prices were given in the deeds. . N . Other deeds filed were: Mrs. Balt'e F. AVaddell to Mrs. Rutha Fufr for SISOO, property in West Concord. | A. P. Widenhouse to W. E. Mc ; Manus, Jr., property in this eouuty for S6O. . George F. Mott to Howard ITott I for SI3OO, property in No. 10 towii- I "hipt F Aberdeen is the only university in I Great Britain where the students ; wear scarlet gowns. • THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE ORTHOPAEDIC CLINIC TO j BE HELD ON SATURDAY Dr. AthnCo Myers to Conduct Clinic j Saturday Afternoon at the Health Offices. fir. Alonzo Myers, of Charlotte, will be in Concord Saturday after noon to continue the series of ortho paedic clinics which he inaugurated here several weeks ago. The biinic on Saturday will begin at 1 o’clock and will be conducted in the offices of the county health de partment in the county building- on Church street. • * In discussing the clinic Dr. S. E. Buciianan, county health officer, point ed out that all persons who have been . examined nnd treated by Dr. Myers ' at the previous clinics are expected to be present Saturday. And in addition any person in the county wl(o j wishes to be examined for the first time is asked to attend as it is planned to bring Dr. Myers here for several more weeks and treatment started Saturday eair be continued at the suc ceeding clinics. At their last meeting members of the beard of county eommisioners ap propriated expense money for the clinics nnd Dr. Myers has agreed to conduct them without professional charges. Great interest has been j» roused by the excellent work he js doing in the county and attendance at each succeeding clinic has been larger than at the previous one. JIMMY FLOWE. KANNAPOLIS ' BOY, EXPORTED TO VERNON . Former Cabarrus Product Goes From Asheville of Salty Society, to Ver non of the Pacific Coast League.— Has Excellent Professional Record. BY JAZZY MOORE Kannapolis, Feb. 16. —Jimmy Flowe. with the Cabarrus Y. M. C A. baseball teams in 1922 and 1923. j has been exjKtrted to the Vernon clut of the l*ai ific Coast League by Larry Gardner, of the Asheville, Solly So ciety club, for the 1926 season. | Fiowe, a native of this city, is re gaeded as one of the best professiona players in this section of the State I He has served with Danville of thr Piedmont. Jackson of the Cotton States, and Newberry of the Carolina, and with Wake Forest College. Fiowf joined Asheville the latter part of last season, he being one of the leading Miters that club during his stay* there, . j Actor in “The Wanderer” Receives High Praise. "Tyrone Power s the Emil Jan nings of America," declares lisou Walsh, producer of “The Wanderer" i for Paramount. “Just as rhe latter aetpr has achieved fame through his perform ancefc in 'Passion’ and 'The Loves o' Pbarohh' in Europe, ho I believe, Ty rone Power is destine*! to follow up his-,stage triumphs by becoming equally as prominent in the motion picture industry of the United Btatgs, Both men are of the same physical proport ions and about the same age." Tyrone Power, who plays the role of "Jesse," father of the prodigal son. in "The Wanderer," was born in London. England. His grand father, after whom he was named, was the first European star to come to the United States to play on the legitimate stage in that country. "In ‘The Wanderer,’ Tyrone Power had his first real opportunity to make a true success on the screen." says Mr. 'Walsh. “His characterization of the patriarch of Hebron astounded the entire com pany.'' Aside from Power, other featured players in “The Wanderer." a Para mount picture, which comes to the Star Theater on Wednesday. Thurs day and Friday, include Ernest Tor rence, Greta Nisspn. William Col lier, Jr.. Wallace Beery and Kathryn ‘ Williams. The story is a screen version of the prodigal son parable, adapted for the screen by J. T. O'Donohoe from the stage p’ny of the same name by Maurice Samuels. Star Theatre Feb ruary 17. 18 and 19. Parade of John R. Arnam Minstrel Band. Every day jnst before 12 o'clock nooh at the town in which they are showing, John R. Van Arnam's Min strel Band, led by their escort, all in new uniforms* leave their private car. ' "Betty Jane." at the depot fur a pa ■ mde of the business streets. Mr. Van i Arnam has made a eareful selection • of musicians for this season and each ‘ man excels on bis own instrument. ' The band also gives a free concert in front of the theatre before each performance consisting of a program including not only the new numbers, l but many of the old favorites. At the , Concord Pi eat re Wednesday night. i one performance only. The Shannon Players at Kannapolis i By the Press Agent. The Shannon Players opened s three nights engagements ,at the Y. - M. C. A. theatre at Kannapolis last i night with a good house. Many of the old faces are still ’ with Shannons nnd the new mem [ here of the cast are sure to win their place with the other members for pop ular favor. These players have been making the * Y. M. C. A. at Kannapolis for the i past four years, and are popular in 1 that city. *■ [ To Show Health Pictures at Colored i School. Dr. 8. E. Buchanan announces that on Thursday night he will chow his . health films at the Bock Hill colored i schoof beginning at t o'clock. Tonight he wiß show the pictures . at the \Vhite Hall school and next ■ Monday night they will be shown at ( the Wineeoff school. , The meeting as first announced for this week at the j ! Wineeoff school has been set for next Monday night. At the age of ?$, Bfcrs. Mary r. S. I , Toy, of Hartford, Conn., has pub i Itshed her first notch • J jßßooooooOoQ6oooodoooooooooocooooooobooboo6i>oooo6^| ■7 ' V Another Car i i I 29 Gauge || Galvanized Heavy Weight Roofing Only $4.7S Per Square 1! Yorke & Wadsworth Co. I* The Old Reliable Hardware | Phone 30 Phohe 30 jOOOCXNXXXXXXXXXXJOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCXXXIO ! OOOOOOOOOOCKXSXXXXXXXSOCKXKXXXKIOOOOdOOOOOOOOOOOOOr i J j OPPOSITE NEW HOTEL - ! ! ’>0<x>00000000000000000000cx)00000000000000bc9000d00c j NEW ARRIVALS [ II DAILY OF ALL THAT IS NEW AND SNAPPY IN l j MILLINERY j ooooooCoooocKxxiooooot^xiowxrKjeiooooooooooooooofy; —NEW— j " Coming in and I - ' Sm - Going Out „ jTY THE SEASON S /jfpJK SMARTEST STYLES I iK\. I* l All the New Colorings IWj l \A COATS DRESSES / 'VTJ \ Uw' SMART HEADWEAR / J \ T’l $295 $9.75 fill ip coats 75°™ £ /[JA I Mfe 11 PAYS TO TRADE at / / If FISHER’S j | nii illinium : - jziZIHL I'°*sprlngtime^^ Rarely Beautiful FOR PRESENT, ADVANCE WEAR \n extensive variety embracing the favored modes of ' j Spring. Puhips and Strap Effects in Blond Kid, Grey 8 Kid and Patent Kid. Medium and spike heels. AIP J widths. MARKSON SHOE STORE PHONE 897 § fte Very Appearance of These 8 § Pumps Telia You Spring Is Here r i[ In calliag at this store, you will be amazed at the tramformation. 9 (5 You will aay "Spring ia here"—and it ia! Theae Pumps canVey the A 2 theme of Bpring. You’ll see it on every pair. Ami, you’ll Insist upon fi X having oue or two pairs; they are so beautiful. Mont luxurious ms- 9 Q term Is « n<l trimmings, clever leathers and a smart array of colorings O 8 give you the gist of this marvelous displiy. With so much to offer, 5 we maintain prices down to a most modest level. Can we expect you? Ruth-Kesler Shoe Store Sliiltt on resuoT! goocooobooottdftoooooooo^ooooooooooooboooctooooooooo Parks-Belk Co. I I SELLS IT FQRLES6 I K ' ... ■ f ■ 'i. ' . ; ; Concord's Largest and Best I Department Store sells all vj 1 kinds of merchandise, from | the cheapest to the thkt | money can buy. We lilt be g low all of our departments, I where you call buy goods for less money. To save time come to our big store as we can fill all your ; wants. Ready-to-Wear Millinery House Furnishings 1 JSaby Department 1. —„ [ ’ Grocery ' Clothing Department Shoe Department^ 1 Hosiery Department ; Dry Goods Department | Silks Department Notions Department, j; Soys' Department BeaUty Shoppe and The Biggest Bargain Base ment x All These Departments Sell rr FOR LESS Phone 138 and 608 _ § Beauty Shoppe 892 Parks-Belk Co. “THS HOttfe OP SfcTTSR VALUES” -v I Tuesday, Feb. 16, 1 926

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