PAGE FOUR £ the Concofd Daily Tribune l|p* J. B. WIEHRILL I W. M. SHERrIIL, Asaocrtts Editor assoc^tetT ~ ? entitled to the nee faTrepubkeation ot •11 news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the lo ? -"*AU* repuilication *f spec fad dispatches hereto art alrt reserved. Special Representative FROST, LANDIS A KOHN 5 J 25 Fifth Avenue. New York Peoples’ Gas Building, Chicago 1004 Candler Building, Atlanta *Bntered as second class mail matter at the postofßce 4t Concord, N. C., un der the Act of March 3, 1879. » >1 "" SUBSCRIPTION RAPES In the City of Concord by Carrier: i One Year SB.OO Six Months 3.00 Three Months 1.50 ! One Month —; .50 Outside of the State the Subscription is the Same as in the City Out of the city and by mail in North Carolina the following prices will pre . rail: -One Year - $5.00 Sis Months _ 2.50 Three Months 1.25 Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a Month ' All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in Advance 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 7:10P. M. No. 82 To New York 9:03 P. M. No. 80 To New York 1:55 A. M. a . Southbound . Mo. 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. 81 To Augusta 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. 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 ehargepassengers coming from be yond Washington. All trains stop in Concord except No. 38 northbound. TOOUGHtJ J M FOR TODAY—I H Bible Thoactts memorized, will prove e [|j Hr priceless heritage in after years rr : . THE LORD IS GOOD:—O taste and see that the Lord is good : blessed is the man that truteth iu him.— Psalm 34 :S. NO ANTI-LYNCHING BILL. It hardly probable, say Washing ton dispatches, that Congress will pass any anli-lynching law at the present session. There are some Senators who want to pass the \>ill and there are some Congressmen who hold the same opinion but thtre are not enough Senators to put the measure across. The bill was grst introduced souie time ago but it has been lying in a committee. It is likely to stay there. It is more or less directed against the South, but even at that there are some Senators from other sections of the country who are opposed to it, and they can keep it from becoming a law. The cloture rule cannot he iuvoked , for the two-thirds majority cannot be found in favor of the bill. Some of the opponents say they are ready to stay in Washington until Christmas be fore they will let the bill become a law. j There are many reasons why the bill should never be passed, the most important being that it takes a Way more States rights. The Federal gov ernment, or at least some persons want to centralize all power in'Washington. Enforcing tin* law against lynching is strictly a State problem and the fed eral government could do it no pet tor than the States. Under the law every county in which a lynching occurred would be fined SIO,OOO ami members of a mob doing the lynching would be tried in federal and not state courts, p Just what effect that would have it is difficult to understand. Why dors any Senator think, for Instance, that a mob member will xtbp to consider | Wligt his act costs. Mob members do £ not think; that’s the reason they are in the mob. And why do Senators I think federal court juries would be more liable to convict than a State I jury? .The make up of the two juries in practically the same way. and there is no argument that federal officers would be more ibclmed to make ar >!;■ rests. Most federal Officers are resi |. dents of. communities in which they operate. They Wbuld have just as many friends as the State officers if that is any argument. ; The states cad handle this matter t, just as well as the federal govem- E ment and it is strictly a state prob b/ lctn. We have too much power cen p lered in now-. NEED MARKET FOR THEM. Jfe' f ’fThe Fharlotte News admits that §?■ djt is economic folly for North Caro l's lina to be buying Ski per cent, of the H iHltter it consumes outside the State.” t : but it predicts that the condition will r. continue until butter can be produced l| hr! the State at a profit. Continuing The News says: ft I, Producing butter in North Carolina I may her not dissimilar from the pro- I (faction of such a* commodity us eggs. I far ' nstai.ee. When either is under ■it: MEssifc.sSL.'? -e~ % more than about half what the enter ' prise has cost him. It costs money to. make eggs and butter. They don’t grow wild, r Cow feed and poultry feed are enor ’ Piously high. The man who undertakes to make r butter for his own family, or eggs, [ either, finds that' it would * have been just about ss economical for him to have joined the army of those who are buying, even for the outsiders. If some economic pathway‘ could be ’ cut toward making such undertakings profitable in this State, the people Would furnish a slice of butter for ev ery mouth in North Carolina for ev ery meal, and it would not be other wise with egg. ' However, our producers are hardly ’ rich enough yet to be philanthropists. In other words a market must be established for such commodities be fore North Carolina people can af | ford to handle them on a large scale. I It would be impossible for residents I of the State to produce just enough * eggs and butter-to supply the needs 1 of the State. If they -produce enough i they are almost certain, to produce too ■ much and at present prices and under present conditions they can't do this ! at a profit. , GANG DIGS TUNNEL TO $76,000 IN FI RS Robbers Work Two Weeks Under ground to Reach Shop.—Police Station Across Street. New York World. The loss Os furs and skims valued at $115,000 was discovered .enter day aft r robbers had entered a ..fur shop by tunneling into the twse inent from a building in the rear. In another, nifie men held up forty-four employees, including the owners, and escaped with their loot in a truck. When the fur-dressing and dyeing firm of Julius Klugman Sons. Inc., at No. 151 West 30th Street* was opened for business 'll the morning, it was discovered that more than 3.- 000 skins and finished furs valued at $75,000 had been stolen. A gang of men apparently worked several days digging into the, base ment from the cellar of a vacant building in West 31st Street, near Seventh Avenue- Police in the West 30th Street Station, directly op posite the fur store, were unaware of Sxeavating going on. Two weeks ago a man, now being sought by police, called on Joseph Sebroeder, No. 137 West 23d Street, agent of the property in West 31st Street, a vacant -Joft building, and asked if he could rent the ground; flbor for the purpose of holding "an auction sale of furs.” He said he would be all through Y>v Mated 1 and the ground floor was rented t) him atSa nominal fee. From that time on, police believe the robbers began to dig to a spot only six inches under a wire-protect ed window iu the basement ot the I fur shop. Sunday night or yesterday morn ing the thieves loaded the skins on a truck and drove away. They left pickaxes, shovels and other tools. In the lift building basement police found a couple of tons of earth, bricks and stones which had been passed back by the men who built The tunnel. i Tallassee Company Buys More Row an Land. Salisbury Post. The Tallassee Power Company, which operates the big Badin alum inum plant and which is securing arge tracts of land along Ihe Yad kin river for the purpose of develop ing water power, has just acquired nearly one thousand acres in Provi dence township, this county. This company already had purchased con siderable laud in that section and it is understood has negotiation*. on for taking over other real estatjevfilong the Yadkin river in this county. In taking over the for which a deed was recorded yesterday it is understood and is so stipulated in the deed that it is to be u-ed for the purpose of water power development. The land for which yesterday’s: deed was registered was purchased of Mr. <'has. H. Kluttz and the deeds as listed is in substance as fol lows : C'hais. H. Kluttz, to Tallassee Power Company, seven acres, orv south side of Yadkin river, adjoining Kluttz and Withers lands and near mouth of old luifl lace; also reprisal and perpetual flooding privileges of, 10 acres of Kluttz land, known as tract No. 3. <jn Yadkin river; anoth ‘ er tract of 525 acres, adjoining i Kluttz. Withers and Kern and Linn t lands: also ten acres adjoining Van Poole lands: also 454 acres adjoining . Kluttz. Withers. Eller, Sowers, and Van Poole lands, making a total of !t!Mt acres of the Kluttz river lands in Providence township. In this transfer it is mutually i understood and agreed that these - lands are to be used in connection . with the proposed water |tower de , velopment on the Yadkin river, and these lands may be submerged with water and subject to natural vftria -1 tiou caused by rise: uud fall of river. In the United Htates more than -1 .180,000 women and girls earn a livo . lihood as telcifiione operators. ; Weak? Always Tired' Take Iron with Cod liver 03 Easy to Take in Now Tablet Form How to Order from Your Druggiat Get strength and nerve force quick t Stop getting up tired in the morning. Add Sto 13 pounds a month. Take Iron tot rich red Wood. Take cod liver all tol p eoad healthy sash. Physicians say thesl ” ate sure body builders. , Chemists now extract the vitatnlhw >- Liver on and Iron Tablets at tho drua 1. stnto. Tteyli start tb bald ydßr Weffifi ,it»d give yen strength and energy almos r For iVk wj? Glduqil Drag Sltff® ..., i'S * r. v nV 1 WANTS BOWIE TO ( RUN FOR SENATE 1 i Friends Ufr Ashe County Men to • Try! for Overman’s Place. j. Winston-Salem. March 3-- —Tam , Bowie itt not ready yet to say what 1 he is going to do about entering the | 'race for. the for the ■ United States Senate t<**lueceed Seg; r ator Dee S. Overman, who has al ' ready thrown his hat into the ring * tor renoraination and (Clio is riffii f mtinieating with many friends iqr the 8 State about it. No cue knows/what - ? may yet happen to change the com - plexion of things, a North Wilkes- I - boro dispatch in the Winston-Salem - Journal. Hundreds offriends of Mr. Bowie, i . who is known ns the champion od ! ’The Leaf Provinces,” and has been 1 | aptly termed by Congressman ! Doughton ‘’Tip- Lion of the Moun tains,” have insisted that he cast ' his hat in the ring and oppose Seh ator Overman for the nomination, i seme of them urging it upon one ground and another, but chiefly on account of the fact they Say that the United States needs new material to , represent it in the upper body of Congress. . The Reynolds candidacy, friends of Mr. Bowie declare, is but allotip-r reason why the Ashe County legis lator should get into the field nnd will help instead of militate against his success, in the race for the nomi nation. They point out that withotjt effort or trouble. Mr. Bowie enlisted a following of thousands in his can didacy for the nomination for Lieu tenant-Governor two years ago and that he would certainly stand a fine chance of winning out in the event be announces himself for the Senate. Girl students at the University of Tennessee claim to have discovered that'lettuce has everything else backed off the hoard as a eomplexioh beautl tier. Now they are eatftig it three times a day and between meals. j Married women will be barred from nil civil service appointments in Massachusetts, is a measure now be fore pile legislature of that State is enacted into law. -A THffiE DAYS' COIKH SYS DANGER SIGNAL Persistent coughs and colds lead to j serious trouble. ’’’You can stop them r.ow with Creomulsion, an emulsified . creosote that is pleasant to take. Creo- j mulsion is a new medical discovery with two-fold action; it soothes and | heals the inflamed membranes and in hibits germ growth. Os all known drugs, creosote is rec ognized by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agencies lot persistent coughs and colds end other forms of throat troubles. Creomulsio:: , contains, in addition to creosote, othei healing elements which soothe and heal the infected membranes and stop the irritation and inflammation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is ab sorbed into the blood, attacks the seal of the trouble and checks the growth of the germs. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfac tory in the treatment of persistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis and other forms of respira tory diseases, and is excellent for build ing up the system after colds or flu. Money refunded if any cough or cold is not relieved after taking according to directions. Ask your druggist Creo. midsion Company, Atlanta, Ga. (adv.) gl|f 5& r H' s fc eve ?t and most beautifully furnished hotel Efuatpstance from Pennsylvania and wand Central Stations. at 63rd St... *# , *T«SSS n!l '«fa»' RpOMWITH PRIVATE BATH ■ x ♦S =s2? All outside rooms - WHY SUFFER SOI » Get Back Youi- Health as Othc. ■ffiwtodrd Folks Have Done. Too many people „uffer lame, aching backs, distressing kidney disorders and rheumatic itches and (pains. Often this is due to faulty kidney action and there’s dange I of hardened arteries, dropsy, grave, or Bright’s disease. Don't let weak kidneys wear you out. Use Doan'i n Pills before it is too late! Doan’i. t are a stimulant diuretic to'the kid neys. Doan’s have helped thou Bands- Here Is one of many Cot n . Mjfs. M. M. Gillon, 43 Belt kve„ * "My kidneys were Out Oi oraer and acted irregularly. My •U back became lame and weak and 1 [ ® f felt dull and run down. I ipan’c Pills helped me by regulating my ,rj »nd relieving all signs o. s»L Price We. at all dealers. Don t >3 slinply ask for a kidney.remedy— star Ce., Ufa*.. Buffalo, n. Y. * * i m I i ai . f i' . .Y-.h'b- 1 . ’ti&t&ifflm THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Published ny arrangement with First National Pictures, its : r Sriß STORY THUS FAR ' . £ /oanha, a modern, pretty, shop iflrl <a to have n million dollar* to opend. Gordon, her employer, telle her. There are no "conditione" Bhe (a not even to know the name Os her benefactor. Nothing more than thU can be learned from ban her Eggleston, nor hie suave, man about t,awn nephew who helps her write her first check and tells her that he intends to make love to her. Dated by the sudden flood of un dreamed of wealth, crashed by (he fact that her shop girl friends will not believe she gained it honorably the is confronted by John her child hood sweetheart. Be also scorns her tale, angry accusations are said *—® scene ensue*. Joanna crushed Mnkf to the floor. Later she finds that Urs Adams, her landlaSy, dam' believe In her. The next day U to be-dedicated to Oeorgie, a Whop girl companion. They plan to spend some of the/ fortune for finery. CHAPTER VIII. (Continued) Which Georg le gayly did Her rejmrt was hysterically satisfac tory, Sobered only by the 'dtscoe- J ts AgeiUrofth carried nut ihe i fieai which lurked in At* cal Qfiiatf trig eyes, she’d chtekmake Inm. *n that she’d been short-changed len dollars out of the twenty dol lar bill she had finally given mtn *i.et him keep It." Joanna or lered, shortly. ’Tt’U be something o remind him of the next time be I refused you credit.” “It you get me those duds you’ve promised me,” Georgia returned, “I'll get my herring and dll! pickles tt the Rita. See it 1 don't. All 1 peed Is clothes to get out ot the leltcatessen class." Joanpa shot a keen lo« at «er, tut said nothing. John had turned ier soul against preaching.. The beautifications that are suit ible to new street tatlleurs, Jo j inna's which she had worn the titernoon before, and her prelim inary gift to Georgia, which Oeor (le bad blossomed in for the eve alng, are not nasty ceremonies. It was well coward noon when the iwo girls settled In their taxi And ;hen Georgle had to wait, a block *rotn the store, where she would toi be detected as having broken tetther a leg nor k deck, while Jo inna presented herself to Mr Gray- Jon'a secretary. She just wanted to talk to mm agata. She etplatDed, ind to let him see her. The "boas" of yesterday made her understand that b« was her •friend” ot today, and all days. He thanked her. gently, for stopping in. and hoped that she would come hi often. But be would not give her the thing she asked Advice. DimeiMng that would be • hint to »er ot what was expected ol her; 4 what she should do to carry >u! the wiehee. or tho plans, of her icknowc benefactor. “1 have’ been cautioned by your badker, Eggleston," be,said, "that | must not pretend to kdvlse you Not now, at any rate' Mr Eggles ton la emphatic to saying that a sondttlon that went with the money was that you solve your two problems. Afler/awbtle. per haps. some, of the severity of the ban may *e lifted. fa«* oow I mustn’t Interfere." "Am 1 Just to take an this money xnd go out and spend it, thepT" Jo tuna persisted. "Just go out and drifad tt— some way. 1 Support fatt la one way M repeating Shat fad saay do with tt whatever you wUI." Bo naturally tba* she did not fctxrW than she wail doing it, the to tell MU about Cohen, and she ImstlialH ftßd’ was abashed her fntentiy. Almost sagerly. Be re-aasufed ler quickly. “On tho contrary, Joanna, that Is just what —1 mean, U does interest me tre mendously. Won’t you go on— about John? You straightened him out, 1 hope and It’s quite all right, now?” . "No.” Joanna replied, her voice* quavering a little. ”1 didn’t, and It isn’t I’m afraid It’s all crooked In his mind." "What ar6 you going to do Vbopt it?" . "Just let tt stay crooked, ! gufisa. Crooked things that ought to t-“ straight, must get that way hs themselves. 1 think. If they to be hammered out, they're only make-believe." She was silent, loir a minute, then added so suddenly ‘ that Graydon was sure she hoped ( to catch him off his guard. •What would you do about it tt , you were In my place?" He smiled. "That Is one of the very things I musn'l advise you about But 1 sßall want to know, , very stncerMy. when it begins to straighten out —ami see what hap pens them 1 (ball he Interested in John.” “Well, that’s more than I am. I right now," the gtrl retorted. She 1 was restless under the keeu scru tiny with which Graydoh was sud ' denly observing her. was still 1 uncomfortable when she sUid good 1 bye to him. She had intended to ‘ ask him what part in her affairs he thought Brandon was to play. But . | she concluded that she would have 1 to find that out for herself, too. 1 it was theu that she resolved that perhaps Brandon eould show her | the way to go, as well —belter, per ‘ haps, lhan John. CHAPTER' t\: Joanna Answers Questions Brandon watched the gtrl who : sat opposite him, across the little 1 table. The wralth-like smite—the I smile that Irritated white Hi' taunted, hovered slyly at hts lips., and in hts eyes. The girl he I watched breathed quickly, alertly. ' while he surveyed the bright scene 1 around them Her eyes leapt Into tar corners of the ptnk and gold i hung room. In among the dancers i aud the other vis a vis tables like i their own. 4 Suddenly her glance met Brandon’s. She nodded at him. as If she had surprised his ' reflections, whatever they were / "It was gdod of you to come." Brandon murmured "Presently i It will not be such a simple matter to win a teie a tete, Trom you.” "After awhile. I hope, you wilt 1 iell me what you know and I don’t tow. of what ‘presently’ Is to be fbr mg,” Joanna returned, the ser ious cloud which was never far absent, showing agatb In her face. “We shall have to make a new harfcalß." he rtld: “That you will accept from me completely that I aa> only a spectator to your extra ordinary circumstances i shall he part of them, only as you give ' die ifavor What are yon ?" "Please!" Joanna Interrupted; "Not hbw—not just yet! Os cotirrt a man always has a list of questions to put to any girl he Is Just gettlnw acquainted with, at least that's Vhat I’ve found, and y°sr Jlsi }? longer than moat. 1 suppose. I've always had the an swers—learned them by heart, you know, hut they won't fit now So 1 I shall have to think when yon > start In And I don't wantlo . think—just yes. About mysStfT I mean" j . ' She fell to looking about the * room, again, eyes wandering rest- I lessly but ahlnlng with' the inner setting of the moment , Braitdoh had com* for her. eh they bid agreed, fit the wake of the fiotasra she had,fauna, ta their ttsfaed bri* awaiting her whhn tap* from r {,«* yuSt* fh°Grty d• bV office* 1 nf the blooms BOW elans to n ‘i" r *el r 5 Ty % 1h ® * n *** would no tic* In Urn conglomerate company around them, hut Bran* . don's >aa an •experienced taste. | For their evontng he had chosen the brightest of the fashionable rendezvous where names and die- 1 tinetion of some sort dr othdr Ire held to be the only acceptable sesames. The women were beauti ful and of the varied pattern that decorates the now" age. Debut antes and matrons from the first families, nasal-voiced and red throated women of the nonveaU riche from the last families, and the eve* Inescapable bevy of movie celebrities from none. Jo- , anna had tasted of the gaudy cab arets—they had been the lamp posts along her paths of gaiety. But hare here were women gowned bfr the master dress wait- , qrs of IK* day, artists of the world of the elect And tbe-men matched the women. She caught her breath at the originality of this thought V-<he men matched the women whose jeweled throats shone vel vet white against their black shoulders! And the mnslc—soft exotid strains that laughed and sobbed their rythmic testacies Jazz, ,of course, but not the kind she had ever heard A snper Jazz that called to her with its melodlea of lulling romance Her feet were still and her slender, warm poised little body wast quiet, but her eonl was dancing? the gleams in her deep brown eyes were dancing, and through her brain new sensa tions danced Brandon was whol ly sensible ot the little , drama* tjiat flitted acro3?i the eager face he eyed so curiously. "I would like to dance," Joanna exclaimed, suddenly "Shall we?" lie rose Instantly, and her Info the maze on the floor. Jo anna observed that women, when they had looked Into Brandon’s face and recognized hlth. shifted their eyes quickly Into her’s. What she saw In their glances nuzzled hc»; she recognized some thing speculative, as If these wo men who knew the man whose arm encircled her and who danced as none of Joanna-s partners danced, had a common curious re gard for his unknown companion. She concluded, shrewdly, that wo men ♦ou’.d "profess to not like Brandon, but were secretly fas cinated by him She felt uneasy, again, and was glad when the en core finished . "Now the questions," she chal lenged him, abruptly, when he had held a light to her ctgaret and I then to Ms own. “But 1 haven't made a program of them.” he protested—once more his voice was like a caress. “I promise to combine them, 411 Into one, or, two, at most; aniT be con tent with whatever you conclude t» tell me What are you going to do? —that, of course, Is the first one." "And that’a longer than any list any man ever put to me." She as sured him "Yesterday morning I wont to my Job at the store won der,lng If 1 could get along for two weeks’ salary Tonight I’m won dering where to begin to spend money You see one of my plans —tho first one l made got all smashed up somehow, ‘ ( don’t know how—but "'u’s gone, any how" Brandoh probed deep. I “That was & mod Interesting chap , who waited for you last bight— : In the drawing room." he ventured. "1 ,wonder If the smash you have In .mind came after I left you?” JOWJpta looked out Into the room, I as If. 'n the brilliance of the scene ! to soothe her memory of'the hours In the ’’drawing room oqly" after Bratulon had tone. "Yes,” she admitted, quietly: "After yon lef You, see John was all that I had, the only one tor share with He dug a knife into me and twisted It around!" “That shodldn’t be serious," Brandon observed "Wounds of that sort are easily healed. Heft soon be thinking better Qf his temper—and his suspicions.'' “f am not So shre of that!" she returned, quickly. "He doesn't understand me-Mt saeros as ir nobody does. But ho was the ohly ope who hurt It Jrould be easy to stCalghttn out his mind, of courae But he conldb’t preach at me. j#y more would make him bScomfort "Was it. then, so rfeMenf fa ba so very oeceaaary?” Joanna ahot a quick rlaheS at her answer that. now. ’Ton said there was to fee a »BCona question —what la that oner • "You Have already answered H.“ he murmured “It had to do with 1 wotft ask any mora about him. I am to be bis rival yon know," Brandon's babtt of saying this sort of thing so easily, worried „ An * of her boys fumbled dreadfully when they attempt! dtft gallantries. , “I believe you could look Into ■“f. WMjJW'* eyes and say 'I love Yon with a free conscience and him ° W * qulTW "' * ha challenged sofilv. -You ‘.ill fs* m *n. lb your new carter, wbo Will hesitate with each a VOW," he replied “And. I Taut* ■ you will not be loa«k learning hoar , 14 meet alt aneb emergencies" i “I Shan’t fear the man," she Victor Dance Records for March | Marvelous Movie Makes miitjili mi Dancing. These dance records arc O shr.pty supert,. You’B never wt«t to Mop stepping once you put these X on. Let us play tbtsn for you today j >/ Thai Certain PhtUng—Fox Tret 1 (from Tip-Toes)—Paul Whiteman / , and IBs vWehestra . * . ■ ~ ] 1 Sweat and L&w-Down—Fox Trot (from Tip-Toee)—Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra. 1 No Mail’# Mama*—Tax Trot—Paul Whlteinan and His Orchestra. |l The Monkey DbatUe-DaP—Fox Trot (frm The CScoanuts)-—Busse’s i Ittte itlrii (Jlrl —Fox Trot (from Chariot Revue 1920). —Paul \ (-- . vTilteman -and His Orchestra. ", i to I Owe?—Medley Fox Trot (from Princess- Flavin) —Inter--' ' Novelty Orchestra. i ' rtaln Trot With vocal refrain—Russo and Fiorto’s i Wole Orchestra. ] to” Go W here Vtm Go— Then I'll Be HaapJ —Fox Trot—Russo i nd ItioftoV Ornoie Orchestra. 1 \ | for tha Buggy Ride—Fox Trot with vocal chorus—Waring’s von inns. J • ■ iji • Some Latin* p: Be—Fox Trot—Waring’s Pennsylvanians. i! Green Hat—Fot Trot with vocal refrain by Billy Murray.— i|i sek ShilkreCs Ok-hestra. . . > • i by U PeqnsylWdfos— Medley Fox Trot With vocal Refrain— >| taring's Pennsylvanians. i'i vwaia State Ooßeje— Medley Fox Trot with vocal refrain— Var ins’s PentnylranlauH. x t I Waa In Push—Fox Trot with vocal refrain—Russo and 'I I * "iorto’s On ole Orchestra. 1 1 1 fy'a Eye*—f\}x Ttot—Russo and Fierto's Oriole Orchestra. i'i la Just l a Sailer’s Sweetheart—Fox trot with vocal refrain— , 1 leorge Olsen aud His Mdslc. - / 1-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. r I Conkey’s Poultry I! FEED j The Original Buttermilk Starting Feed and—- |j I CONKEY’S LAYING MASH jj Are The Best Chicken and Egg Producers Known A full line of Conkey’s Scratch Feeds on hand at all j times. Call for Conkey-Poultry Book telling you how to ![i feed your chickens best. RICHMOND-f LOWE CO. OqOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOMOQftOO0AlifeOtM»aC«MM>foOeO»<4»M?QQOO y : iI6 a 1.1 ■!eW.nß.v;lMLU»i»itr. jpfpH / |CAR LOAD PAINT Just Unloaded a Whble Car PEE GEE PAINT ! - i Whatever You Are Considering j i Painting, It Will Cost You No More j to Use PEE CEE PAINT I SEE US FIRST-BEFORE BUYING I Ritchie Hardware Co. \ / . YOUR HARDWARE STORJS PHONH ni\ v ■- If you want te assist Ifi key ing tlte desperate character known as “illness” off q( health avenue, you can do so by pur-, chasing your remedies of us. I’m the man who wilt see that you are treated politely and charged fairly. s* ~ ■ ‘ ' . J " ' California Touts Votes. PEARLDRUG 'i ■ Thursday, March 4, 1926 1 op TtMPtaTo A at Ate Don’t let your temperdiget the best o f you Muting this weather or during tke hot days to come. See that your bath room is fitted with the ptoper tub and plitmbing and you can lati&b at Old Sol. Wp’re plumb ers de luxe when it coihes 'to bath roQln fixtures. CONCORD PLUMBING v COMPANY & ltl Rfctt St. Phone 178 , '

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