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PAGE FOUR e I fKc Concord Daily Tribuni J. B. SHERRILL ” fit : Editor and Publisher S' : M. SHERRILL, Associate Editoi MEMBER OF THE Hp f ASSOCIATED PRESS : The Associated Press is exclusivelj J entitled to the use for republication 01 jifc 41 news credited to it or not otherwis* f wedited in this paper and also the 1» • •) news published herein. - ■ All rights of republication of spec RAf Ml dispatches herein are also reserved >’ ' Special Representative , FROST, LAND 18 A KOHN I 225 Fifth Avenue New York ■ftf Peoples’ Gas Building, Chicago 1 1004 Crndler Building, Atlanta Entered as second class mail matter at the postnffice at Concord, N. C., un ider the Act of March 3, 1879. j I SUBSCRIPTION RATES 1 In the City of-Concord by Carrier: ,f{ f One Year $6.00 ms Six Months 3.00 S I Three Months 1.50 rl i One Month .50 ! Outside of the Stair the Subscription Eej . Is the Same as in the City ! *OuC of the city and by mail in North Hit Carolina the following prices will pre ||( d*il: IS, One Year $5.00 I,.?; fflx Months 2.50 i | Three Months 1.25 S Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a Ei I .- Month ■All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in Advance RAILROAD SCHEDULE If; In Effect Jnn. 30, 1920. Northbound £S ; No. 40 To New York 9:28 P. M. ? -No. 186 To Washington 5:05 A. M. 2 : No. 36 To New York 10:25 A. M. * Vo. 34 To New York 4:43 P. M. 51; No. 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M. ■ » : Vo. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P. M. I lit: No. 32 To New York 9:03 P. M. : No. 30 To New York 1:55 A. M. j Southbound j No. 45 To Charlotte 3:45 P. M 1 I* So 35 To New Orleans 9:56 P. M. t W> 29 To Birmingham 2:35 A M I 'jn 31 To Augusta 5:51 A M Vo 33 To New Orleans 8:15 A. M. Pta. 11 To Charlotte 8:00 A. M I | ; No. 135 To Atlanta 8:37 P. M 3> ! No. 39 To Atlanta 9:50 A. M. 5 1 ‘f'L ?” ’ r ° New Orleans 10:16 A. M. ® • Train No. 34 will stop in Concord | tp take on passengers going to Wash- J Ington and beyond, a j Train No. 37 will stop here to dis i charge passengers coming from be ' , yond Washington. £ : All trains stop in Concord except No. 38 northbound "I I .. f-X-BIBLE 'THOUGHTI I —FOR TODAY ■*I ? H Bible Thought* memorized, will prove a 111 s» . r^, gC ,*, eßa ,,^~^, tage a^erygftra I% 1 * God s "Word Stands:—Tho grass wilherptli. the flower fadeth: but the word of our God shall stand forever.— Jj Isaiah 40:8. IHE Y. M. C. A. NEEDS YOUR HELP. R. H. Ki ng. of Atlanta, regional - supervisor of the Y. M. ('. A. in the Southern States, told directors of the Association several days ago that the program of the local Y is j, known throughout the Southland. Wherever discussion of Y work is ; started, Mr. King said, the Concord Association is always mentioned, and the scope of the work and the success with which it is carried on has made j of the Concord Yan association of al j most national reputation. -, Tiiis fact we mention because it (; seems to us that it is reason enough if, |j I lll * before the people in a plea for their co-operation and support. If > the ( uncord Y. M. (’. A. were doing nothing, if it were doing no more thau - hundreds of other associations for | that matter, it would not enjoy such a reputation that serves bs an im •; petus for other associations, j: If the Concord Y". M. (’. A. did not ; function in an unusual fashion, ip. oth ; cr words, it would be known no far *: ther than the borders of the country, or at the most no further than the l borders of the State. The local as ; sociation is an unusual one, both in j the manner in which it is supported {' ami the scope of work it carries out. I; The support is nothing more than ! a free-will offering in one sense of the i word. The memberships are not suf ficient in number or size to raise the j: money necessary for full operation, j yet tile citizens of Concord have seen I to it from year to year that there is fi enough money pledged to meet obliga- ! : thins. lor the money pledged they receive j lull benefit. There would not be half as much amusement. wholesome amusement at that, for the young peo ple of Concord if there were no M. C. A. The employed boys and girls who use the facilities of the associa tion would have to find some other means of spending their leisure time. It is no unusual thing to see 100 em idoyed boys, practically ail of them from the cotton mills, at the Y. M. C. A. here on a single night. H? ■ These boys can’t afford to support a |f'' '1. >l. A. of their own and it is t right and best that the facilities be jwovided for them by those persons who cun afford to do it. That's one of the things that make life worth While. |r.- • . T,u ' V. M. A. ljgs ou its books about IS,OOO in unpaid pledges. Tiiis v, money should be paid. It was sub ■ ' *oribed in good faith, tfie directors of the association presumed, and they ar ranged their program of activity on such a presumption. When the mon gv *1 * 8 hack it means an eitibar rusHuieut 'for the nseboiation. p We wSsh there were! some way for 0 pull to be taken among the children and young people of the city. .x,i their views on the worth and necessity of the associat'on could be obtained. We arc confident that the result would bv <M» overwhelming victory for the guo- g ciation. - Concord has a real asset in its Y'oung Men’s Christian Association. Such an asset can be retained only _ by co-operation of the citizens of the city. t WHICH GROUP CLAIMS YOU? Are you the citizen who works alone and knocks everything and ev erybody else? Are you the kind that _ sits quietly with folded hands and , does nothing either way? Are are you the kind of citizen that co-oper ates and builds? | According to The Knoxville Senti nel, there are four kinds of people in r town and it gites its lesson in L “ community arithmetic as follows: . 1. Those who cause division, whose I quotient is strife. 2. Those who subtract from the ; j common welfare, whose result is de ) struction. ) 3. Those who passively add to the common good only because compelled ! to do so by force f law or custom, j 1 whose sum is dependence. -1 4. Those who multiply their efforts by working with o thers and boosting ; ) for development, whose product is \ prosperity.” t i J Another 15.000.000 bale cotton crop j is certain to bring 10 or 11 cent cot- 1 ton in the opinion of most cotton ex perts. The farmers should remember this. They should take a lesson from this year’s crop. There is more cotton than is needed and that means low prices, regardless of what it cost the | farmers to produce it. 1 . TWO ARE KILLED AT A GRADE CROSSING Automobile Demolished By Seaboard Limited at E'ranUlinton, , Raleigh, March 26.—Mumford D. | Dexter of Wilmington, Mass., was ,'instantly ki led, and his wife fatally ! injured when their automobile was struck by a Seaboard limited train j at a grade crossing near Franklin ton. Franklin county, this morning. Mrs. Dexter died aboard the train j while being rushed to Raleigh. Mrs. , Thomas .T. Wilson, of Boston, the I third passenger in the ear, was in- j jured. but her condition is not ! serious. She is in a local hospital. i Eye witnesses were reported in accounts received here as saying that Dexter, who was driving, ap parently did not see the approaching train. The machine was struck squarely in the middle and was de molished. ; ' ’ The party was returning north ! after spending the winter in Florida, i The bodies of Dexter and his wife ! were brought to a Raleigh under- j taking establishment. Re'atives were notified by wire and directed that j they be sent north. Sunday School Is Twenty Years Be hind. Kinston, March 27 —The Sunday school is twenty years behind otfier institutions, the Rev. H. E. Spence. I of Duke University, declared in a I recent address in Queen Street Metho- 1 dist Church here. Mr. Spence came 1 to Kinston as a member of a Sun- I day school training school faculty, j He described vividly conditions which I confront the Churches today and | which challenge them to action—a j youth, a disintegrated, an unprotected I youth, a disintengrated home life, a I church fast losing its faith, a mis-! directed ministry. To oath and every pet-son comes the challenge to face these conditions and remedy the eviis, declared the speaker. The church must make progress. He urged better training for Sunday, school workers, courage to face new scientific discoveries and study them without losing faith, a renewal of fine home life of the past and restroation of the family altar, protection for the young from the be setting eviis of the day and a mm mtry that will lead the people to a higher plane. ‘•The church of today is insolvent,” declared Mr. Spencer. “Were you auditors to find a bank paying as little as two per cent, interest, it be closed. Yet the cfiurehes are pay ing dividends of less than two per cent." M liy aot make the church keep Pace with the progress elsewhere? lie asked. “Let tts take advantage of training opportunities; let us be a people who attend church services, who put into practice the vows we take at the altar.” , Joke May Have Been on Judge Grady But Stranger Never Stopped. , Gatesville, March 27.—Gntesviile is | wondering whether the joke is ou lodge Henry A. Grady or the Rtrang- I er. Judge Grady is similarly puzzled. I Ute stranger, for obvious reasons, | cannot be interviewed. I Judge Grady, who was holding Su perior Court in Gatesville this week, was strolling near the court house. A stranger tapped him on the shoul der. "I got it," he said. , "Got what?” asked Judge Grady. You know." replied the stranger. "Come on over here behind this house and I’d give it to you,” I “Do you kuow who I am?” asked the judge. “Ain't you the man that ordered a quart of whiskey from me?" the other countered suspiciously. "I m Judge Grady presiding over Gates—" He got no further, it is reported. The bootlegger fled taking on speed as he ran. Cranford Murder Case to Be Heard Thi* Week. 1 Albemarle. March 28.—Criminal court begins here tomorrow, and it is expected that the Cranford ease, growing out of charges by the state welfare department for killing two or three convicts, will hold the stage in this county during the week and will attract attention throughout the state. Lord A lieu by, the famous British w>ldi**r #n<J lal* bigb (‘omniisniourr for Egypt, i« known among Ids subordi nates as "Xlie Bull." 1 [ANSON COUNTY MAN IS I t! FOUND DEAD IN' AUTO! [ Accidental Discharge of Gun Held' , 1 Responsible For Death of Walter H. Hanna. Wadesboro, Mar. 26.—Mr- Walter ! H. Hanna, a well-known citizen of Wadesboro Township, was killed in- j stantiy while alone in his car ou the Camden Road. A charge from a shot j gun which he had with him entered l his head just above the right ear. | J ranging inward and up. and blowing i | off the entire top of his head. Some j , of the scalp on the left side was left, j but all the skull and brains were I j blown out. I Mr. Hanna was alone in his car i when the shot was fired. He hnd left home only a short time before, and j took his gun with him, for what pur pose is not known. | No one was present when the snot j was fired, and so far as has been I learned, no one heard it. However, ■ William Howell, son of Mr. W. I). I Howell, was driving a truck in com pany with some others boys along the road, and they arrived on the scene very soon after the shot was fired, as the blood was stilt running down Mr. Hanna's face when they got there. Mr. Hanna was sitting un der the steering wheel in driving po sition. The battery was turned on, and the spark and gas looked as if he were just about to start the ear. or possibly it had been running and had choked down. The door on the right hand side of the ear. winch was a Ford, was open, and Mr. Han na’s single-barrelled shot-gun was lying on the ground beside the ear. The mark where it had fallen out of «um it iiwi m:ifii mi’ oi j the ear show plainly. Investigation ! after officers arrived showed that a j pipe full of tobacco tamped down | was lying between his feet, amt a I package of Prince Albert tobacco I beside him. When Mr. 11. H. Leavit, I the undertaker, began dressing the j body, it was found that several shot I had entered Mr. Hanna’s right hand, on the back, and it is supposed he I was in the act of lighting his pipe. ! when, in some way. his gun. which [ was beside him. either fell, or the trigger caught against something, land the fatal shot was discharged. There were no burns but Mr. Han nans rig’it ear was blackened by the powder. Vi ould Stop Allege! Sale of Federal Jobs in South Carolina. Washington, M arch 26.—-Repre sentative Stevenson, democrat, South Carolina, who has* charged in the house that postal positions had been sold in his state, introduced today a bill "to prevent purchase and sale of public office.” The measure jyptjld make, it un hnvftfl 'fd 'offer rrtbnev ’or anything else of value in return toward pro curing appointment to federal posi tion. It a’so would he illegal to solicit such aid. Any one violating the proposed act would be liable to punishment of not loss than one month nor more than one year and disqualified from holding public office. MONROE MAN TALKS ON HEALTH After Realty Trying HERB JUICE Mr. V. \V. Hargett Says It’s five Only Medicine For Stomach Trouble. Indigestion and Sluggish Liver. “I am not a physician and know nothing about prescribing medicine, but when I hear of anyone suffering front stomach trouble, indigestion or sluggish liver I immediately say 'AH you need is HERB JUICE, and I have no doubt whatsoever but that they will get almost imuu-dlate relief. The reason I have faith is be cause I too suffered intense pains from stcmuch trouble, indigestion and sluggish liver and HERB JUICE made me feel like a different person," emphatically stated Mr. V. W. Har gett. well fynown Monroe citizen to the HERB JUICE demonstrator. "Continuing his remarks he said: "I could not eat anything. Every thing would sour as soon as it reach ed my stomach and immediately I wouid suffer agony from gas pains. I could not rest day ,r night. I was steadily getting worse, for 1 lost about twelve pounds. My liver was sluggish ■ and that alone would have caused me to have a tired, w rn-out feeling. Noth ing I took seem J to help me ami I tried many kinds of tned’eiites. I had heard of so many cases right here at home where HERB JUICE had cured troubles similar to mine and so I went to town and bought a bot tle. Today I am on my fifth bottle, but I atn not the same man I was the day I bought m.v first bottle of HERB Jt ICE. I now eat auything I want and have an appetite that is really alarming and I enjoy every thing I oat for I never have a gas pain or sour stomach. HERB JUICE also relieved the condition of my liv er. In fact my vitality seems renew ed and I know that I have found the best medicine ever prescribed or ever to be prescribed and I am glad fur my friends to know about it." For sale by Gibson Drug Co. and druggists everywhere. 100 100 * FOR HEADACHE-NEURALGIA Rheumatic u i Female Paw DOSE—One Powder on tongue I followed by half glass of water. I Can repeat in one hour if ever necessary. FOR SALE »Y ALL [_ LEADING DRUGGISTS ■ •naa.ir.frfrti’^Htf 1 (THE CONCORO BAItY TRIBUNE - ’ j l || wmkAawvruL ■ ■ ***''"' ■ **"*'' yr;i!i " ■*‘ s ’■*' Copyright 1925by H.L.GATES Published by arrangement with Firet National Picture*, Ino. CHAPTER XXVIII. (Continued) | Again she waited to watch the nebulous trail of the smoke wraith I that lifted from her clgaret. Jo anna’s jade and bamboo holder was poised midway between her lips and the table. The brown eyes had become ivory black. Her lids were drawn close, until they shaped Into two straight lines. “You mean,” she said, ‘‘you want me to stop beckoning.” Lady Betty was so startled that her clgaret slipped from her fin gers to the floor. A maid ap peared out of her forgotten prox imity and recovered it. Lady Betty did not see the hand that held the retrieved tobacco. “We mustn’t make it a skirmish, my dear," she said to the girl who looked het full in the eyes. "I'm not come as a wife with a bargain to propose to her husband’s mis tress. I’m just Betty Weymouth | dropped in to tea to ask her friend the Golden Girl, if she won’t be [ chummy and generous and let a good chap down —let him down easily, but let him down. He loves you, dear, and he wants you. I’ve always said that there wasn’t a reason in the world any man oughtn't to have any woman he j wanted —if she’d let him have her l That's gone for my own brother, too. But he wants you for keeps That’s different, isn’t it?” “Yes, it's different,” Joanna agreed. “Women are so free to be had these days, that it’s strange any man would want one—for keeps. And you think I’m not the kind he ought to have—in that way?” Lady Betty smiled, and reached for a new clgaret. “My dear, you are so unex&cted.” she exclaimed brightly. “One plans a speech, or a sentiment, and you twist It Into something that doesn’t sound right at all and hurl it back before it's given.” Sho was earnest again. “I mean only that it wouldn't be fair to me. to my brother, to our family, and least of all to you, dear girl, if you married Teddy. It wouid be hell for you. in fact And, worse than everything else. It would be hell for him I love my brother, Joanna. He’s a good sort. Throw him over, won’t you. like a good girl?” “Really, you know. I’ve never taken him on,” Joanna reminded Lady Betty, and then added: “But I might, most any time. As you pay. he’s a roefi port And I like him tremendously. He’s asked me to marry him. you know, and that’s made him fearfully interesting tp me. You must tell me why ’’ Rhe stopped. With her eyes she signalled the maid to serve the brandy and soda. Niether woman tpoke while the ice was served and the mixture made. Then Joanna tsked: “Will you tell me why I am not worthy of your brother? He knows Me. You don't You and 1 are «*mmon birds of prey seeking the Mtme game. You hunt in your gay. I in mine. Your thrill may be different than mine, but we're Women —or, at least, if you are a woman. I’m a girl, which is the iamo thing. It may, or it may not tie, that I shall want Lord Teddy. tVhy not?” "A Dorminster always has wo men,” the other woman returned, 'and he always puts them aside for a wife. The wife must be “lean, and good. Are you bothj ny dear? You’re modern, you mow. You’re beautiful and lovely, »nd. I think, honest. But you're ill body. I’m all body. too. but I haven't the nerve that yoc have. You’re not ashamed of It. A Dor-, minster must be ashamed of it. [t’g a Dorminster convention, surely I won’t have to say any bore.” "No, you won’t!” Joanna agreed. 'Neither shall I. Teddy would •ather have hie final answer from fee, than delivered through his els fer. I know. And, I fancy, he’ll tnow quite well what a Dorminster wants—and needs. Perhaps he’ll get It Perhaps not Shall we walk through the grounds? I Ihlnk you aaid you’d like to se* tomethlng of the preparations I’m raking. While we are about It hope you'll choose the {dace for four seats In my pavilion theater. !'m staging a Utile play there that ! know ycu’U lovs.” They spent an hour on the grounds. It was as If they had' forgotten their time at the tea table. Lady Betty was ecstatic fgaln. and enthused anew at each loretasts of the enfete thrills brophesled by each preparation made by the workmen on the kmette lawns. At the pillared fia rtllon she was sympathetic with ihe mystery Joanna spread about fee plans which wers to have thelT climax there. *i shall have Teddy sit close to tie to protect me from whatever levittry this pagan temple shall infold,** she threatened "I shall Want him to be very dose to you,* loanna agreed. And Lady Betty looked at her quickly. There was mmething unwonted In the voice A the Golden Girt. CHAPTER XXIX Memories Again B the visit of Lady Weymouth (est It* Impress upon Joanna, only Roddy Kenilworth and Teddy Dor (ninster sensed It, - Neither of them knew of the appeal to the Golden Girt by the sister' of one of them, but both, In their separate regard of her, were conscious of a subtle, hut Insistent change in her. Wbn jnlffht have realised It. too. •rat wM .sot-a sensitive obser- vation. And, as the days passed, 1 Yvonne had drawn him closer and ! closer to herself alone. That Yvon . ne was deliberate, and merciless, in her fascination of the young archi . tect whose name had so suddenly , become known around the world, was apparent to all that gay circle which worships, like glittering der vishes of a Lucullan cult around the shrine where aU U gold that glitters. As Dorminster had repeated to her, as Kenilworth and Brandon had echoed, and as even Lady Wey mouth might have said, those who watched were quick to recall, it had been promise that when the bril liant, always dazzling Yvonne Cou tant decided to strike back, there would be a crash. The crash, they predicted was on its way. And the ruin it would leave would be the Golden Girl. If there had been restraints fixed by Joanna tor her bewildering rev ?!. they seemed suddenly to vanish Whatever walls she had built around her scruples tottered. So it seemed, and so those who Picture Joanna cmmplei up onto the lawn and lay. fare buried in the Brass, her shouldert shaking con vulsively. watch concluded. Teddy Dormin ster was frankly worried Kenil worth. with the calmness of the older man, gave no sign of what ever might have been his reflec tions, but Joanna round him more constantly at her side. There was some marveling at tDe persistence of the bond which held Yvonne and Joanna together. Be tween them there seemed to have arisen—nothing! As always they were Inseparable, whether at the Casino, in the gambling rooms, at Prince Michaels, the Opera or at ihe fashionable gatherings among the villas. There had been a deep interest in the vaguely rumored ro mance between the young apd wealthy American girl and the promising young architect whoso dream in atone was coming true. It was believed by some that Jo aaina was surrendering him top quietly not to have a design in re serve. Others pointed merrily to Kenilworth. Brandon and Dormin ster and remarked that the field of her choice, and of her variations, was wide. Perhaps Martha, who, at times, and in the secrecies of the blue and gold and scarlet boudoir, lapsed from the impassiveness that should bedg£ In a humble nrald. and put her aims around the girl who slept in the big bed. might have added something to any discussion of her mistress. Particularly after that mistress had sat up la the bed, knees drawn up and chin resting on them, silent and almost pulseless, through all the houra after she came in until dawn. What Martha would have liked to have reported, as something however that she couldn’t understand, was that when Joanna Anally stretched out for a two hours’ slepp, she remarked, ap ropos of nothing; “There’s a lot of things In the world that don't matter!** John walked with her through the grounds when the workmen, with renewed feverish activities were putting their finishing touches to the falry-Uke struc tures. The night of the fete was close at hand. Her* and there across the grounds mini ature domes and spires were being glided, Their shining sur ltiO*s caught the glints of the stm and mingled them with filmy, iridescent veil over the whole Mediterranean shore. “It means something, that tint In the atmosphere,” Joann* ob served. “One of the Monegasaues who live her* the ydar roufid prob ably would make a prediction of some sort. Every one of them is a weather expert.** ’ They would hare spoken of the haze In the air to one of the **- tlvee but 1* their absorption of th* imposing details of the re shaping at tfee Araette grounds. th*y forgot the embryo mist, as w*a h*r custom of late Joanna ac knowledged no Intrusion betwaeu John and hersaX. After that first the day of hie arrival, whsu her heart wee ryady to leap to bis, bat was repulsed, she had beep whatever, hi* current mood dicta ted that, she stonia be. At times Mlences between them. At other ttmee he wee detected, moody, today. Joanna knew, he wa| ogkt in* with a jettons hurt. The in* weeks es his n»u bad slons tor him. The Prince of Mol aco, Interested always In topics an proposals that are of human mert had honored him with a comman audience and had presented hit to that distinguished group i scholars and scientists, and worth men of other professions, who gatl er around him* from many pari of the world. It Is their tribul to the Prince who is dead, tb father of the present ruler of tb little principality. These savanl greeted the young American wit enthusiasm. They compliments him upon the daring of his pn jected monument to the temlninit of the inspiration for deeds of val« that soldiers perform on the battlr field. They were interested In tb spectacular rise of the young sti dent. He was asked to deliver a address, and did, with triumph I himself. Just this day. Joanna knew, on of these commands Into the co> eted circle of men whose namt ' were great, .had been cancelled not abruptly, or offensively, bt i cancelled, nevertheless. It coul only be interpreted as a remind* that even a great purpose and high ambition could not withstan a too flagrant violation of certal standards. John had become tc much of a frequenter of the rou ette rooms. And there was t« great an interest generally in poin mg him out as the new devote of the beautiful Yvonne Coutan i and one who would be apt to sa, rifice deeply at the altars of h* sorceries. The distinguished youn visitor from America had* becom one of the bevy of moths, eve if a brilliant one, and those wh distribute honors are sometlm* , conservative. ' The girl who walked through tb Amette grounds with him woul have liked to comfort him, bt he would give her no opportunity While they stood on the Trianu steps and watched the distribute of huge piles of blossoms, rose rhododendrons, and mimosa, a , ready being brought from the f Monegasque gardens. Joanna r marked: "You haven't complimented r» upon all of this. Doesn't it r mind you, somehow, of the eve ings we spent planning the tin when we wouid be able to buil together, a bouse that would ha» cost hardly more than my pavillc ever there?" It was not wistfully said, nor » reminiscent tone She was stan- Ing apart from him. and spoke i if voicing a casual thought frown came into his forehead. “Those are not good memorlt to have." he said. "This sort . thing gives them a etlng.” She looked at him in open wo derment. If this wonderment wi a mask, she concealed it skilfully “No memory has a sting. John she returned. “That is, If tb< are the kind of memories that at worth while treasuring. The mot we miss the things we once bo the more gracious is the recoils non of them I've put a little t> of that house we Used to plan lnt every one of these things I’ve bu) here. Funny. Isn’t It?” “The house. If 1 remember, wt to last a lifetime. This is to I the humor of a night, t can't u derstand what part or one cou be. built Into the other.” Love, John! Into the other y< put what was your love- your id of it. Into these things here I'i put that love of yours, my dear taken it from the home you wou have built, and pnt It Into this, was you, you know, who said, Ju now, that the other was for a ill time, and that this will be desola and crumbled In the morning, i least I expect nothing more— 1 this.” \ Ho was silent. She left htm 6 a moment to give an order to tl Amette gardener who supervls* the sorting of the blossoms whli were to shed their perfumes f a night and then wither. Whi she went back to him John sai with the blunt suddenness th echoed a determined resolve: "There's something I must si to you, Jo. It’s been trying come out for days, now, and know you've been expecting It. I* been rather a coward.—" "Rather a coward, John I" It was said, quietly, eoftly, b there was something deadly In t) manner of it He flushed, b went stubbornly on: “Yes. rather. It’s to be abo Yvonne, you know—Yvonne a me." Again that quirt, soft intern tkm. “Tell me. John: are y going to marry me?" This time she was looking him. He could not evade tho brown eyes that were darkened the purple hace In the air. a whose customary fires seemed have cooled Into s lary smould While be shifted nervously, s drove In her challenge: “Don't be a coward always, Jol 1 love you. I love you as a a seldom knows how to love. T marvel of my own money, a ife mystery and the threat that u|dden In It somewhere, has net appalled me so much a* your si cfss and the grandeur of the thl you are succeeding In doing. Ti has made my love more of a t Wan’s than a girl’s someway It will stand muahr Even y< cowurdicy. Now you're being bra again, so go all the way in a l#ap. Never mind the etops between. You’ve a fortune of yc opvn In sight, so my money need chunt now. Shill you marry m« “No, Jo. You see Yvonne k y I** (T $ be continued) —" "■ 1 "! 1 i,J !*j —=—■=r" l : l !.jij;;"'i j ....i ■ , i, K HVMUUtUmm^ Start Right Buy D. & M. Base Ball Goods I And begin the season Right You Will Make a Better Average | By Using the Best. You will find here Just What You want Complete Line of Athletic Goods Ritchie Hardware Co. j I YOUR HARDWARE STORE PHONE 117 FRIENDS IS&A&fcig WITH THE By giving superior | quality and extra ordinary values. This Week It’s r PIPES , PEARL DRUG CO. 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The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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March 29, 1926, edition 1
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