PAGE SIX 11 Rill' / / «> P/. : / / I ?J * - A; K X ■* lYour Ad in This Paper The use of space in this paper to tell the story of the merchan dise you have in your store is the one certain way to get the interest of the people in this community. And in propor tion to the interest you arouse in your store and your mer chandise, will be the amount of business you will do. We are ready to help you tell your story—phone 78 and we will call at your convenience I with a detailed plan for proper- I ly merchandising your stock. I The Concord Daily Tribune iPenny Advertisements Get the Results p m ms. mits get ms I Our Penny ADS. Get Quick Results I Oooooooooooooooooboobooooooociooooooooooooooooooooocwooooooooeoocsoooooocwo II Market of Faskiom [1 LITTLE C MISSNBW YORK jjj We Present the Smart Successes jij R\ 1 F° r Spring, 1926 J 4mR They are Pouring In f A I M Again we are on the threshold of a new fashion season,]!] IS 'ah' li?\& 1 1\ i . n 4 the bought that naturally arises in the minds of fas-']' r *i, ¥,|UJ tidious women at this time is “What Is the Mode.” A' I IE Jgn7l)y careful inspection of our new vast spring stocks will in-]!] I x BH4LII formr you correctly about the new lines, new fabrics and l I v / r faajwj new colors. The store is refreshing with new spring ten-! ! I g decides style supremacy for Spring, 1926, is es- ] I POPULAR prices I |*i| COATS DRESSES 5 1 lySjjf —Headwear — Bp j IT PAYs TO trade at I j[ FISHER’S j Rw>ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo Railway Head George E. Evans ts tbs newly-ajy pointed ezecuUve vice president of the Louisville ft Nashville railroad. Though he does not carry the title of president, he succeeds the late WUbe U M&pother as active head of the road. MORRIS “FRIEND” IN THE MONROE JAIL! Companion of Runaway Husband Says She Left Him on Wednesday. Monroe, Feb- 2G. —Driving in at 2 o’clock this morning with Mrts. Bricey Reames, the woman suspect ed in the Holmes Morris sham mur- j der case, and the old White Wyan dotte hen from which he blood wan 1 drawn to pull the sham, Sheriff | Clif Fowler and his deputies, J. W. I Armfield and J. L. Williams, an- 1 nounced that the two chickens in < the affair had been captured and i that they are through unless Mrs. j Holmes Morris wishes her husband j trailed down for abandonment. Believing that Bricey Reames was ! the woman with whom Morris left. ! the sheriff on investigation found cause to have two warrants sworn. out for her. One wan for transport ing and sale of whiskey, and one for forgery. He got trail of her late last night and in company with Vic Fes- j perman, Mecklenburg policeman, | caught her on the square in Char- j lotte- She admitted the charges on j which she was arrested, while on the | way to Monroe jail, and me sheriff j I asked her if she would please tell him what she and Holmes Morris did 1 with the chicken which they bled at ‘ the Wynoma mine to make folks [think that some one had been mur* idem!. She told him that sue.would show' him, and four miles out of j Charlotte she had him stop and told | him that the old hen was thrown down the bank in the the vines. On investigation the sheriff found the J chicken still in the* bag and its feet J I tied, its throat had been cut. j S. R. Doster who sold the hen ! identified the bag and the string on 1 the chicken’s feet ns the ones fur nished by him when he sold the chicken. Mrs. Reames was reticent today when interviewed by reporters. She stated that she and Morris traveled until Wednesday of this week to gether and that she became so full she had to come home. When asked what she meant by becoming so full j she said she menat that she got ! i nervous and sorry for w’hat she had done. She told Morris that they had better both come home for she felt that Cliff Fowler was after them and that, he is as sharp as a briar and would have them before they I knew it. She said that she had no ill will toward any of the policemen, , however, except “OJd Vic Fesper -1 man,” and that she would shoot him THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE A world championship tennis battle was under way when this picture of Helen Wills (foreground) oand Su zanne Lenglen in action at Cannes, France, was made. Suzanne, French star and conqueror of the California girl, is (lashing along the back lines of the court to meet one of Helen’s returns. Both of Miss Mills feet are off the ground for her swing. “Flapper Evangel;;!’’ Weds Bessie RandeU. funout "flapper evangellM" of Santa Ana. CaUf. la the bride of the Rev. Bert W. Bruffett. Photo shows the newlyweds aftei tha ceremony.) as quick as she would take a drink | of water. Fewperman was the officer! who first called her to halt last ‘ night. She extolled the character of , Holmes Moryus and «aid that he is 1 the finest man she ever met. She left him crying for her to stay with him. she said, but in addition to fear of being caught she did not think it was right to bereave his wife. Bricey Reames u> about 30 years of age. and is not bad looking. She! married at the age of 14 years, ami has three children, a son. 14, a son [ 11. and a daughter seven years of | age. She has not lived with her hus- j | band for two yearn. I Rev. J. H. Broom is Tried For Auto mobile Accident. j Winston-Salem, Feu. -b. —Rev. J. j 1J H. Broom, Baptist minister of Bon-! lee. who figured in a sensational i ! automobile accident here in the early j part of November when the Buick I | roadster in which he was driving I with a young woman was wrecked in j I the Waughtown section w’hen the car struck a telephone post, was I SpQCOGOOOOGOQGOCOOOCOOOOOOOCOGCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO BUY GOODYEAR BALLOON TIRES AND SAVE YOURSELF AND YOUR CAR Yorke & Wadsworth Co. The Old Reliable Hardware Store Phone 30 Phone3o ) ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooS ! tried in the municipal court this j morning. He was charged with reck | less driving and judgment was ; suspended upon payment o- the coat. in n statement given out shortly after the accident, Rev. Mr. Broom stated that he was at the same hotel where the lady was stopping in (Jreensboro and upon his remarking that he was coming to Winston-Sa lem the young woman offered to ! bring him. Near Kernersville she is said to have become tired and the i minister took the wheel and when • near the edge of this city he was | urged so he stated, to pass a bus | that was in front and in doing so the | car struck a fender of the bus, de flecting the roadster from the street - and in the mad flight from the higb j way a section of fence was torn from ! in front of a residence, a tree badly ! scarred and the machine stopped, I wrapped around a telephone post. 1 The minister suffered a broken leg * and until recently had been confined in a local hospital. The young worn* lan w r as uninjured. WELL, KNOWN RALEIGH CHARACTER IS DEAD •Tnclc” George Alston, For Tears Supreme Court Janitor, Dies at Advanced Age. ltaieigh. Feb. 25 —“Uncle” George Alston. 40 years janitor of the state Supremo court and until the econo mies were set in motion last year, almost a member of the court, died today'. He was in his 00‘s and in his ele- I ment until recently. The janitor never was himself after the death of Chief Justice Walter Clark and when the old uncle fell from the pay roll. he lost he remauant of his spirit. This, however* was largely a sentimentality. Uncle George was not a pauper. He was worth nny man's $25,000 and he had a remark- , able faculty for freezing on to that. ] He was a Confederate soldier, ] fought the Yankees who were trying to make him a free man, and car ried a bullet In him to his last day. IHe was wounded in battle, not in I sniping He never regretted lighting j with the Confederates, j In religion he was first a Congre- I nationalist and then nil Episcopalian. He could not read the service, but no bishop in the whole domain knew better when to rise and read than he. He produced a first rate soldier for the world war. He 1 iveil a most useful life and reared n large family, not one of whom ever brought re proach upon him or the name. The employes of the revenue department | today sent to his home a handsome 'wreath, partially a tribute to hia I soldier son in the state's service and I likewise to the old man himself. Every lawyer in North Carolina was George Alston’s friend. Women Teachers Fired For Smok ing Cigarettes. Winston-Salem, Feb. 26.—Accord ing to a report received here today, two lady teachers in the Wilkes county public schools were discharg ed this week for smoking cigrettes. this being in violation of the order laid down recently by the Wilkes Board of Education. The ruling ap plied to both male and female in structors and it is reported that other teachers in the county may lose their jobs unless they comply with the new law. The tournament of the American Bowling tVngress opening in Toledo on March sth will be the twenty-sixth championship event conducted by that organization. In the long history of the Epsom Derby, beginning in 1780. Steve Donoughue is the only jockey who ever has succeeded in winning the great turf classic six times. In 1004 the Washington Senators lost Jl3 games, smashing all Ameri can League records for defeats in one season. The Great Salt Lake of Utah was 1 discovered by William H. Aaheley, of St. Louis, a celebrated mountaineer, i in the year 1824. Plant Something Now is an ideal time to | plant something in those idle [ places on your property. These i vacant spaces will pay divi -1 dends if planted with our I plants. We have an extra fine lot of ! ; fruit trees, vines, etc., to select \ from. Our line of shrubbery ia j second to none. Our Roses, \ Spinreas, Forsythias, Wege ; lias, Hydrangeas, Coniferous < and broadleaf evergreens are < of the beat selections and it will pay you to consult us be fore you plant. Call us for an estimate of your planting. It places you under no obligation. Crowell’s Plant Farm Bast Corbin Street Jgttshelpl/ou ORGANIZE A BAND AS REPRESEN- WjKj vantage of Conn’s XJL tatives of C. G. mm amazingly liberal Conn, Ltd., we are V jff new plans. See in a position to help g big ad in Satur organize and com- day Evening Post, pletely equip bands February 20th. and orchestras with the Come in and talk this famous Conn instru- over with us. No obliga ments.No down payment, tion; we’re glad to give, just a small payment of y° u the details. only $5 PER MONTH. Clubs, lodges and indi viduals should take ad- KIDD-FRIX Music and Stationery Co. Inc* Phone 76 5$ S. Union St. Concord, N. C. ICAR LOAD PAINT Just Unloaded a Whole Car PEE GEE PAINT Whatever You Are Considering Painting, It Will Cost You No More to Use PEE GEE PAINT SEE US FIRST-BEFORE BUYING Ritchie Hardware Co. I YOUR HARDWARE STORE * PHONE 117 amaWoaiiHig>WTCT , wnatW«aflamiH'!TOatfu^TOaiaaaag». OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOPOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCIOOOO THE UNIVERSAL CAR ! SUPREMACY MAINTAINED THROUGH FEA TURES WHICH ESTABLISHED FORD LEADERSHIP i LEFT-HAND DRIVE Left-hand drive was originally introduced by Henry Ford on the Model T car in J9OB. It caused a mild sen sation in the motoring world, accustomed to nothing but right-hand drive and control—a feature adopted from abroad where are rules of the road are to drive to the left. The advantages of left-hand drive seemed so obviously better for the driving requirements of this country that the change was made. What has followed since in the 8 industry, is a matter of common knowledge. REID MOTOR CO. t CONCORD’S FORD DEALER 8 Corbin and Church Streets Phone ttO a 'OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQoIf , Saturday, Feb. 27, 1926

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