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PAGE FOUR file Concord Daily Tribune ft J. B. SHERRILL Editor and Publisher , If . M. SHERRILL, Associate Editor MEMBER Or THE * ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of . fKnews credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the lo esl news published herein. .All rights of republication of spec- M1 dispatches herein are alas reserved. Special Representative j FBO&T, LANDIS A KOHN r ■ 225 Fifth Avenue, New York I Gas Building, Chicago j ) 1004 Ccndler Building, Atlanta I tehtered as sec end class mail matter . *t the postoffice at Concord, N. C., un sOr the Act of March 3, 1879. ■f! SUBSCRIPTION RATES In the City of Concord by Carrier: One Year $6.00 Months 3.00 'dree Months 1.60 One Month .66 Outside of the Staff the Subscription ! Is the Same as in the City £On* of the city and by mail in'North Carolina the following prices will pre- SnsYear $6.00 Sit Months 2.60 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 Np. 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. So. 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M. Be. 12 To Richmond 7 :10 P. M. No. 32 To New York 9:03 P. M. Np. 30 To New York 1:55 A. M. Southbound No. 45 To Charlotte 3 :45 P. M. No. 35 To New Orleans 9:56 P. M. ffo. 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. 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. . All trains stop in Concord except No. 38 northbound. 1^— FOR TODAY-1 | B Bible Thoogs.ta memorized, will prove • |il i |e; Dnceleaß heritage in irtcr yean jg| Soek Today:—Seok ye the Lord while he may be found: call ye upon him while he is near.—lsaiah 55:6. SENATOR WALSH WOULD GO The American public, apparently ac customed by now to scandals touch ing on the administration of the gov ©Wjment, has been willing to drop the case in which Senator Burton Wheeler was charged with all sorts of' law violations. The case was heard in federal court, the govern ment presented its evidence, secured at- great cost and under all mauner of spying, and the Senator was freed. The public, we repeat, Apparently, is willing to let the matter drop there, but Senator Walsh who de fended Senator Wheeler, is not through with the case. He wants to kbpw what the government is going to.do with some of its star witnesses, men he charges with perjury. .There is ohe phase of the ease es pecially, that deserves attention. We refer to the apparent absence of real evidenee but an abundance of evi dence that the jury did not believe. Senates Wheeler was attacked after he had attacked the Department of Justice as managed by Harry M. Daugherty. The public accepted the cnoe as the Department's revenge against the Senator. Agents of the gep eminent. paid enormous salaries I and given unlimited expense accounts, wCr<‘ sent all over the country in an effort to secure some evidence that etgild lie used against the Montana Senator. They told their stuff to the jury and the jury didn't believe them. ' We. should not allow such condi tions to exist. Any American, and certainly any one holding the high office of Senator, should have the right to question actions of departments without harmful reciprocity. Still in this case there haS been no real de mand for an investigation into the character of the witnesses nor the manner in which they testified. The. jury didn’t believe them: the public sue ms to think it doesn't make any difference. There will always be scandals un less the people give government offi cials support iii tbe ! r efforts to find the truth. It was nothing less than a disgrace that Senator Wheeler should have been indicted on testi mony furnished by agents of the de partment the management of which he had attacked. MILLIONS MORE FOR ROADS . The American peoptr. especially since the advent of the automobile, have learned something of the great advantage of improved roads. They are gettiug out of the muds and ruts and no sooner do they build otic sys tem of highways than they want to start another. ■fc' Millions have already been spent for tii&se. yoads. 1 I’art of tiff mohey in appropriated j by ; con mm -, safe* t.ajpines from stiff tuft ttoni the federal government, In the long run the public pays the Mils, of fegmrre. There is no cofiipfafat. in fact the only suggestion made by the public so far Is a plea for more im- proved. Highway construction and mainten ance fa 1926 will equal and possibly exceed the progress made in any other year according to estimates from the various States compiled by the Bureau of Public Roads of the United States Department of Agriculture. A- total of $1,030,286,948 is available for construction and maintenance of all rural roads. Fifty-eight per cent, of $598,590,- 948 is to be available to the State highway Departments, of which $461,- 515.400 is for construction and $137,- 075,548 for maintenance. These funds will provide for the construction of 6,751 miles of asphalt, concrete and brick paving, 14,320 miles of sand-clay, gravel and macadam atid 8,145 miles of improved earth road. The States also plan to maintain 234.582 miles of road. The total expenditure by counties and local units for both maintenance and construction is estimated at $431.- 696.000, which is less than the simi lar estimate made one year ago by about $31,000,000. This reduction is more than offset, however, by tlie in crease of more thau $58,000,000 in funds estimated as available to the State highway department. For a number of yekrs there has been a trend toward placing cpntro' of all important State roads in the hands of the State highway departments. NO FARM RELIEF YET. Now it seems that no farm relief measure will be passed at the present session of Congress. The House ex pects to adjourn within ten days and the Senate is about ready to adjourn without enacting any of the plans submitted as a remedy for the ills of the farm people. The real trouble lies in the fact that no one seems to know what the farmer needs. There have been plans aplenty but no two farm associations have been able to agree on the same plan, and members of the committees in the House and Senate hardly know which way to turn. The Republicans would like to make some move tending to prove an inter est ill t'.ie farmer, but they don't know which way to move. In their doubt they probably will do nothing. CANDIDATE HAS A NOVEL PLATFORM Tom Byrd, of Stanly. Says He Can Solve Problem of Getting Court House. Albemarle, March 10.—Candidate , Tom Byrd now comes forth and bold ly announces one pliase of his plat form. He declares that he and his followers will build a court house for the county of Stany free of all charges with a special whipping post to take the place of the county jail. This court house'ißiti whipping post are to be located in West Albemarle on a ( certain parcel of land whivh Candi- ; date Byrd himself will donate. He M states that he has considerab’e back- ] ing and aiding and abetting from his many business friends in West Albe- - marie and with their aid he will erect , this court house absolutely free gratis to the county. \ Mr. Byrd also declares that he has a mule, by name “Nebuchadnezzar. ** who is only sixteen years of age that he is going to use to aid in hauling the material on the ground. Neb uchadnezzar will not be over worked, though, for this is the noble animal which Senator Byrd is going to ride to Raleigh upon. He maintains that he likes a mule better thany any of the modern vehicles for traveling pur poses and so t*he little old town of Raleigh just as well prepare for the reception of one Nebuchadnezzar. Candidate Byrd desires that all his friends know that the court house is part of his platform. He will him self appoint an official whipper to administer the floggings to t*io un fortunates who are sentenced to the whipping post. He also makes known that all persons w J ho do not sanction nor like the idea of the whipping post being substituted for the jail may so fas as he it* concerned mom or leave the county. Another thing which Candidate Byrd is getting together at this time in addition to his campaign speeches, etc., is a bountiful supply of good old Stanly grown tobacco that he will pack in his saddlebags and carry on Nebuchadnezzar down to Raleigh. GREENSBORO MAN IS KILLED ON BIRTHDAY W. T. Osborne. Construction Fore man. Killed in Sight of His Chil dren. Greensboro. March 19.—W. T. Os borne, foreman of a construction crew at work on a big drainage ditch here being built for an underpus*. was fa tally injured here late this afternoori, on his 44th birthday, just a few hours before a big anniversary cele bration was seheduled to start, Osborne, who was super in tending placing some drainage pipe, fell into the ditch and his neck was caught m the hook that held one end of the •pipe to a hoisting machine. His neck was broken and his jaw and skull fractured. The accident occurred in front of his residence, before the eyes of sev eral of his children, and joy over l the approaching birthday party was changed to mourning for the loss of the father. He died three minutes after he fell into the ditch. He was a native of this city, with wife, ami seven children. The cave-in caught negro who was working in the ditch, breaking his shoulder, *but foe fritl tecovfcr. 6*l Strange Stone to a Syndl -4 .- v cate. Fdyettevfßo. March' '(•bakes of ' Myrtle itifl." tit* 409-itere (state of Mrs. Suinuel H. Strange, a tdiftrt distance north of Fayetteville, hy a syndicate of northern business men who are members of the winter colony at Fine hurst, wan announced Uiere toddy. , IT’S BECAUSE OF BORG LI.M Statesville Daily. There has been comparatively'little interest in the sale of the Stone Mountain memorial coins in North Carolina, The Raleigh Times is moved to say that this lack of interest “is a distinct discredit to the state,’’ and that the state eapital, “which ’aas as sumed to lead in loyalty to the Con federacy. makes a poor showing.” The Times goes on to point out that the merits of the memorial has noth ing to do wife the quarrel between G Utzon Borglum, the deposed sculp tor, and those in charge of the Stone Mountain Confederate memorial. In 1 other words, we are either interested in this Confederate memorial or we are not: and it is foblish to expect North Carolina Confederate leaders to be included in the memorial unless tip- state pays its share. Os course die North Carolina de linquency is due to the Borglum in cident. Borglum. when he and the Stone Mountain management split, rushed to Raleigh and appealed for sympathy. He got it, full and to overflowing. Without actual and pos itive knowledge as to the merits of the quarrel, the Raleigh people and a large and influential section of t’je state's citizenship, lined up with Borglum and slopped over in their zeal for him. They praised Borglum and denounced the Stone Mountain management. Borglum was to become a citizen of North Carolina and onr folks almost agreed to set him up in business. Last heard of his activi ties iu this state lie was to turn some of the rocks at Chimney Rock into a Confederate memorial. Borglum disappeared, went on about his business. By and by the sober second though came to Ihe folks who made themselves silly about the sculptor and his petty quarrels. TIiC Stone Mountain business went on and recently special effort has been made to sell our quota of the memorial coins. The coin is a half dollar of real money, chined by the United States mint. It sells for a dollar, the profit going to the Stone Moun tain enterprise. It is worth the money ns a souvenir and in years to come will be much more highly val ued as a souvenir. But the Borg lum foolishness made such an impres sion that the coins have been slow sale. They made a hero and a mar tyr out of Borglum. and while most of them would like to forget it now, the impression remains. But if you are interested in a me morial to the Confederacy. \or want a souvenir that will ever he valuable in the South : ami a most unique souve nir minted by a government as a me morial to a government that attempt ed its overthrow—a memorial to noble inen who gave their all for a cause— why the Stone Mountain memorial coin is a valuable investment. A Mail Order Joke. Morganton Xews-Herald. One of the best illustrations of the "mail order” joke was told recently in one of our exchanges. A lady liv ing in the small town of Belton, in the center of the textile belt of Smith" Carolina, ordered some nice towels from a mail order house, paying 2!l icents each for them. They seemed to he a great bargain. The money went from her town and the towels came back. They were all that had been claimed for them. On the band was a stamp. “Made by Blair Mills. Belton. S. C” The lady's next-door neighbor ran the mills and she could have bought the towels for $1.95 a dozen at home. This is merely a 'clear illustration of the necessity for town builders to look around before sending money away. It is also clear that nfer (hants. having mail order prices beat en to a frazzle, will never get the business of their own neighbors un less they tell them that they have the goods. Advertising is the merchant's only warfare against mail order houses. Post and Flagg’s Cotton Letter. New York. March 19. -Complete lassitude is the only description that fits the present market. The final ginning report is due tomorrow and may prove a market influence though the feeling is that the figures though expected around 1fi.000.000 or a little above have been fairly well discount ed and the market will hardly show much change until influenced by new crop developments. Tenderfible cotton appears to be j resting in sarong hands amCin spite of reports of slack demand there is! no suggestion of pressure from the j actual and the hand i , mouth buying j seems in volume sufficient to enable' holders to maintain t’.ieir position.! Mills have some cotton which they would be willing to sell as it is not I needed for Immediate use. but this is I not a surplus over and above their actual requirements and would be sold only to avoid charge- am j j„ the hope of replacing cheaper as most mills still have- to buy to cover require ments for the season. Texas advice.- are very favorable as a whole but elsewhere the crop - is being delayed h.v weather and long ' range experts predict c onditions un-! favorable for crop development, but very propitious for the weevil which has come through the winter very successfuly, it would appear. Some careful, conservative buying, of new crops is noted which while chiefly for the trade is also believed to reflect a growing invest incut demand. In strictly professional trailing circles, however, sentiment remain* against the market. POST AND FLAGG. Warrant'd high anal- fl tty at yamr money bach . Oeritn ft- i» THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUN6 Publithhd by arrangement with First National Pictures, toe. CHAPTER XXII. (Continued) But Brandon controlled her. Thih eho-tnust always admit, in the end. Once or twice, she would remem ber, they had had a conflict. She had drawn upon every Item In her store of artifice and had gambled her lure against his mastery, and, each time, she had almost been the victor. Both times she had brought thfngi Into his eyee that were revealing, and too dangerona for her to fight against. His ob scure, but seemingly malicious power dominated hex again, because she would not risk tempting him. When she had measured herself through the passing’ of the year, and weighed the meaning of each step and its Influence upon her, she would open her letter and read It. As usual, what she feared, was not in the one that Marie had hand ed her while Teddy Dorminsler waited someplace out on the grounds. It included, however, a paragraph which she read over and over again. t All these letters from the bank were dictated by Eggleston himself. He was always the same, cold, pre cise, formal. Invariably he began, “Dear Miss Manners.” She read: ‘I enclose herewith a statement of your account as 6f this date, sep arated, according to your instruc tions, into two divisions. Perhaps you will check the longer one, which Includes items paid by your order. I have carefully checked the expenditures listed on the sec ond statement and And them cor rect. "You will notice that with these statements your account would be seriously depleted, but I am to in form you that your benefactor has notified me that a substantial fur ther depoeit will be made to your credit. You may assume, there fore, that any requirements you may have will be met promptly. I remain, "Very truly yours, “Andrew Eggleston." When she understood the mean ing of that last paragraph, that «be needed more money and it was being given her by the same un known,. and in the same unex plained way. Joanna hastily glanced at the shorter of the t,wo statements. She did not examine the listed items, but only the total. Then she crumpled this'portion of her accounting into a wad and called Marie. "Bring me a can dle, lighted, please," she command ed. While Marie held the tiny flame before her Joanna held the crum pled wad of paper over it until her fingers were scorched, ihen dropped it into the candle stick. She watched until the paper ball had burned. Before she would let Marie take the'' ashes away she stirred them into powder with her finger, as if she would run no risk of prying eyes seeking out a secret from the cindered paper. The other sheet, which bore a-long list of bills paid for her by the bank, she tossed in to a drawer. Then she went out, Villa Amette had long been one of the show places of the Rivteta. eno of those splendid miniature pal aces which nestle in the semi tropi cal foliage of the base of Cap Mar tin, a loir, rambling house of bal conies, trellissed windows, and wide, stately verandas. Its broad acres stretched back onto the slopes'of the hill In seried terraces that lost themselves in graves of olive, orange and mimosa. Bc-low was the dense blue Mediterranean. Gardens erf pink blossoms, and squares of red and white roses overhung the sea and bordered the paths that wound through pergolas heavy with fragrant clematis. Only the very rich, and of these only those whose whims were for splen dor ever had braved the cost of a I season’s rent for the Villa Amette. Yvonne once before had tenanted this palatial estate. Now she shared it, at her Suggestion, with Joanna. Yvonne and Joanna were Inseparable and yet there had been few confidences between them. People had learned that to ap proach the Golden Girl they first must win the favor of Yvonne Cou tant. And they wondered a great deal, because of this circumstance. With a groom holding the bridles of the two horsee, Dorminster awaited Joanna at the steps of a great door that opened onto the driveway. By the time she came out to him he was sullen. Joanna's eyes danced when she saw his mood. He helped her mount, toss ing her to her saddle as easily as ts she were a feather and they turned their horses Into the road that either crossed the frontier and ■went on to San Remo along the sea, or led back to Mentome and Monaco. “ft Is too late,” Donnfaster grum bled, “for as long a ride as San Remo. Shall we go the other way, down into the valley?” “Well go no place,” she assured him, “unless you decide not to be glum. I Want to M tklked to this morning. I haven’t any particular be JSwhred shortly.; “Itfa my, thobritt i %k*ted te talk to -you about, Attnwbrntng Es pecially after la it night.” “Are you going *o remind me •gain of such tpOHafe things as I tuny have said to you last night? U so. I stralghtawa^back. She made no effort to turn, how ever, and they rode for'-a while, horse tq horse, silently. Joanna, buoyant with'her yqhth, took, long the scented, faxy breeze that stole up from the Sea. But when Dormlnster spoke at last st\e swept him with a quick glance. “The thought a s last night that bothers me ts not so much your for getfulness, as the memory oC others. That’s what I want to talk about. She didn't reply, nor did he con tinue. They rode in silence again, until they turned into a bridle path that went in among the trees in the Condamlhe, a path that once Bed guided the Romans under Caesar to the ’tiding place of the Christian Slav* who has since become St De vote, the patron saint of a sanctu ary erected over the spot where she was captured and killed. It 1.; a narrow path. The horses brushed each other as they thread ed it Suddenly Joanna said, Soft ly: “You love me very much, don't you Teddy?” J nd he answered, again shortly, “Yes.” “It’s true, almost, isn't it,” she asked, still softly, "that yon MU'” Os trhot Teddy said—only one thinp hurt <j bit the talk that credited her with "Healing" from Yvonne. stopped loving other women and be ing loved by them because of me?” He glanced at heT, to see if she were tricking him. He decided she wasn't. “1 used to think,” he said, that my mission In life was to love women, but I was Snistaken. I'te learned that It Is better to tove one woman, and put whatever qual ities I have in her trust. So far I have considered women my duty. I've wanted ycu .to be my refuge. But I’ve said all that before, haven't I?” “You have," she agreed, "but you always pnt some new inflection into it. You are good to look upon. Teddy, about as handsome as a man ought to be, and you are good to listen td When you Say ycu arc In love. If 1 were married 1 couldn’t resist you, J knftw.” Anger flamed In his eyes and he muttered an oath. “Oh 1 am not tooling with you/’ she protested earnestly. “1 am Just reasoning about you. You always make me take you seriously, you khow, and 1 wonder why.” "The obviphs aoswef Is, because 1 am actually serious. So much so. that I don’t like what they are .talking about today from one end of the Riviera to the other—your escapade last night with Prince Mi chael, Kenilworth’s fascination tot you. and the affairs of Yvonne. It's 'itotting nasty. I'd like to ght ybh ota't of tt.” Joanna’s eyes surveyed the coifn ttyside, slowly, deliberately. The sparkle Went out of her tafie, but there was no other sign that she \Jas perturbed. When she was sat isfied with Kef examination of the landscape, she tamed again to the man who rode beside her. "I Kate gossip, Teddy: It’S either tr»e or It isn't, and either way n ttn’t any gooff. But you may ten b f are tfre things they art saying?” , Another man might have heSi tated because of the Irorty hidden in the girl's voice, but . young Dor thinster was filled with his griev ance. “The ,usual thing,” he an swered, "abont the Incident of the Russian. You left the grounds with him at eleven o'clock, just when bis party was at Us height, and yoa didn't show up until hours later. The Prince invariably mixes some vile Russian concoction In hts punch,, and In hts brandies, apd everyone had more then enough of both. Their brains were receptive to only one eonclusfoh when you' showed up agftln. Es Aefcially Wheh you toftk hifn away from Yvonne.” „ “Why ‘especially’ tot that, ted dy?” dal out ot it because they* know that when Yvonne gets ready' to turn there’ll be some kind of a crash. That’s all.” “Not all, Teddy. There’s Roddy. You mentioned him. What are they saying about him—and me? Give it all to me while you're about it.” He waited a minute moodily bit ing his lips, but whatever his hesi tations he stubbornly put them aside. “Yvonne Coutant," he said, “is Kenilworth’s handiwork. She was a decant sort until he shaped her to flt- his fancies. Whenever she struggles to get free of him be bends a finger and she breaks. It’s generally agreed he is planning to do that to you.” CHAPTER XXIII Startling News Had young Lord Dorminster been looking into Joanna’s face, when be finished, he would have been puzzled by what he saw. She had been fire while while he told her that “they" were’ saying she had stolen all of Yvonne Cou tant’s lovei* Slpwly the brown sheen of her eyes had crept back until they were almost black. The round red lips had set in a straight line. But Teddy, didn’t look at the girl beside him. The echo of his last words hardly had (fled when he went into a funk with himself. He looked straight ahead, between his mount's ears, and inwardly cursed. Teddy Dorminster was not the kind to say that sort of thing about anybody, to anybody, much less repeat it as the gossip of others. He was sorry, and damned his lapse. When he did glance, timidly, at Joanna, her face had cleared, the brown had come tack betwen her lids, and; her lips had relaxed. She detect ed his chagrin at himself and was conscious of his sidelong glance. In mute acknowledgment of both she reached across with her rid ing crop and patted his sleeve, lightly. They came. Just then, upon th« approaches to the little wooden shrine of St. Devote. By .common impulse, and wordlessly, they pulled up their mounts. Dormin ster held his hand for Joanna's toot as she stepped to the ground. He tied the-, bridle straps together a'cd followed ber when she strolled to a stbne bench under a cluster of pepper trees. “I say!” he exclaimed shyly, "I'm cut up. you know, about pop ping. oil like that! . 1 shouldn’t have fouled Kenilworth, and 03 to Yvonne .” She interrupted him. “And I shouldn’t have asked you," she comforted him, “to tell n»s the things people are saying. Because, you see, I have known right along. I was only curious to hear if there was anything new. That about Prince Michael and me was." "Just the same,” he insisted, “tt was rotten of me. I’U have to see Kenilworth and tell him what I’ve said to ybu. It’* the only Way.’” “You're a stickler for honor, aren't you, Teddy?” “For the sporting thing, any way.” “I wonder, sometimes, if. you don’t think It’s just the sporting thing to do, to make Selleve you Sire in love with me and that, if I’d let you, you'd make me your coun tess and be as true as you could be for ever after? I’m vain, aad wicked, and frivolous, you know, end I fancy you think it would be sporting to take charge of me, who am all alone and keep gne out of the abyss!” His jffoteet* were hot pt hie Ups. and his throat Was cfanftSed with things he wanted to say. But her calm look Invoked a sud den change of mood. While she waited for him to find the ‘word? tor which he seemed to be scrap ing the ground with his crop, the St. Devote woods were very peace ful, only the busy chatter of birds breaking the sfUhiess. “No,” he said at last, slowly, as if he carefully weighed his conclu sions, “there’s nothing sporting about a man’s regard for a woman. It'3 either honest, or it's not. You can’t make a sporting deal out ol it either way. I’ve watched you since that time a year ago when l stumbled onto you ip Yvomje’s drawing room in New York. I’ve seen you fight for of all the crooked things that went on about you. I coold have helped yourairn. many time*, but I knew you’d fathom everything in yous own way. A girl doe* that, now adays. There’s a lot, perhaps, that I don't know about what’it really Inside of you, but I’ve 1) heart that doesn’t grlov* over any thing my eyes can’t see. I wouldn'l care, you know, whether you fell into the abyss, or whether you were so innocent'jou didn't know that anything that shouldn't be, could be. However yhu are, W like, awfully, to have you marry me. I’m honestly in love with yOU." t . y I A whimsical smile played with the corners of her mouth. “I ro member.” she said, “that yoil promised me, that first day ai Yvonne’s that you would be awful ly fond of me.” The smile disapi peared, and left heT wistful. "Amj out to be just what I thought yot would be. AM the rest are differ ent than I expected.” 4 "Are you, too, different thai you thought you’d her* It &***?**'>- I We Are Now Agents For /MYERS I Fresh Water Systems j I a ■ rBJSa Pumps, fi imß J acks q n em WL li, H ■ Cylinders I t Jj -- sortment on ' gggnSgH Hand -I. Yorke & Wadsworth The Old Reliable Hardware Store Conkey’s Poultry I FEED * | The Original Buttermilk Starting Feed and m conkey’s Laying mash Are The Best Chicken and Egg Producers Known § || .A full line of Conkey’s Scratch Feeds on hand at all § 11 times. Call for Conkey-Poultry Book telling you how to 8 | feed your chickens best. * RICHMOND -FLOWE CO. j 1 1 Buick is More Expensively Built But it Costs Less ' v \ 10 Buy one Buick is built more expensively than any other eat# in or nfear the Buick price class. “Expensively built” means that the different parts and units of the Buick motor car are the best diet engineers can design. But, thanks to the large volume which public demand has given to Buick, and thunks also to production methods that ate models of efficiency (n an 4 efficient industry, the Buiek motor , v v , car can be told to you at a Very moderate price. ' , Many Buick features are duplicated A only in America’! highest priced motor cars. 1 J'. ' Buick, for instance,uses theTotoue M ' ’ Tube Drive to transmit the drive 1 of the rear wheels to the chassis, /f ’instead of burdening the rear < springs with this added duty. The highest priced car in America uses / the torque tube. AndsodassßWcki / The American public wants finer transportation and Buick provides it at lower cost. Consequently / V Buickts »vmPop^c^\Cpme / til tnci eminuc tot peror pobkis the | Buick Motor Cars are Now Sold on the Basis of Federal Tax- Effective Midnight, March 88th” STANDARD BUICK COMPANY Tt was 11 dark night nt CnnipGnaut. Footsteps of hoix»s were '.ledrd ap proaching through the gloom. "Halt! Who goes there?’’ barked the rookie. \ ? ,? < "Regimental,'‘c-onjmatfi|Vk*’V j / f. “Otemount, colonel, sad advance U> be recognised.” - • k | The colonel dismounted and came over to the rookie who presented armß I with a .simpL. "Proceed. Colonel,” be said. As be labortoufaiy got back ou his Saturday, March 20, 1026 horse tbe colonel asked: “Bjr the way, who posted you there?" \ “Oil, nobody,"- replied the sentry. • “J’ui- j) . , ,/j ,N Tin- diner was overwrought aud overworked. ' -Also he was hungry. The Writer dame up slid said : “I’ve got devi(M kidneys, pigs’ feet and calves’ braius.” The diner replied: “What arc your ■ troubles to me? I came hare ft eat.” > • *- • - J ■ •«* v.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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March 20, 1926, edition 1
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