Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / April 15, 1926, edition 1 / Page 7
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hursday, April 15, 1926 If Dinner Stories ■ ■»■■■■ I ■■ ■! ». —J BAlrs. Bride—Th it vacuum cleaner Bimbo gave me for a wedding id a complete failure. You to see all the dirt that has ac- in my hou*e. Nayber—Maybe you don't it right. fBH I thought that an it is run by it wouldn’t need anyone it* if we are ever divorced, it worry you if I were to mar ■l again at all. Why should i pity a mm I don’t even know?” hope you will dance with me Mr. Jones.” certainly! I hope you don’t ijMik I came here mcre’y tor pleas leorge— Can I ki*s you? rorgiana—l don’t know*. Most ws have been able to. >orting goods salesman (who has golf for an hour) —By the , I don't know if you are inter i in golf. I hope I haven’t been og you. irl customer —Not in the least — jtell me, what is golf? kn of the House (roaring with k—Who told you to put that pa on the wall? Iperhanger—Your wife. ■n of the House (subsiding)— fy, isn’t it? feeTavish —Ah thocht Donal* line marrit a woman wi farmin’ •rience* She wild hae been a pow >’ help tae him. acHaggis—But, nion, he’s en d to a nurse. acTavish—Aye, hut he doesn’t! ■ct tae be sick all his life, does | George,” murmured Minnie, “aiu j 'S 'as dear to you now as I was be ;lbrc we married?” “I can’t tell,” replied George, ab-; jgjyntly-mindedly. "I divln’t keep any j ®Bc*ount of expenses then.” i^piubby—-Say. dear; here’s a but-! ||aK in my stew. SMP^Vifey—Oh. that must have been | a' typographical error. The cook jgjpook said ‘•button” plainly enough— | ■Phut I think now that it was intend- Protect Your Property and Your Money fftSrUssttE&l XT OUR house, when painted with * Marietta House Paints, is pracd r-fi f caily guaranteed against the ravages of ® f° IJ - weather by the Marietta Service riICODA Plltf Certificate. No other paint manufac -1 c’y turer offers you such a certificate. Ask us about it today. Concord Paint& Paper Ccupany 342 N. Church Street Phone 16L EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO I r -Aisle Voo /vjIGH-T NOT 'E>e<-(fevfe tT / Mr. A I V iC|K<s THAT. 'BUT THAT'S ANO7H&K SToPiY. m lamat x our ~ro -rtscc m-qld ■ _ 4VA ' S/ ■ =£==- -Cr 1 /A NOT He R *3ToFCY il— I -T— I <S(PNTINueC> IM TODAY’S EVENTS.. j | Wednesday. April 15, 1926. ( Sixty-first anniversary of the; , death of Abraham Lincoln. Annual observance of Arbor* Day in the State of Utah. Fourteenth anniversary of the j sinking of the Titanic, in which more than 1500 lives were lo»*t. | Bjsw Carman, celebrated poet and autuor. today celebrates his .sixty fifth lyrthduy anniversary. " A Chicago-St. Louis air mail ser vice, with stops at Peoria and t Springfield, m to be inaugurated to day. An intensive campaign is to be J inaugurated today to raise the last $5,000 needed to complete the Cath edral of St. John the Divine, in New . York City. What is believed to be the first baby chick show ever held in Amer- 1 ica k* to he bpened by Kansas poul- * trymen today sit Kansas State Agri- { cultural College, at Manhattan. Tne Alabama political campaign. ‘ which is to culminate in the pri maries next August swings into full . action today when Lieutenant Gov ernor Charles S. McDowell, the 1 fourth entrant in the contest for the governorship, formally opens hi* campaign. A transcontinental motor car serv ice is operated between San Jose, Guatemala, on the Pacific Const, and , Puerto Barrios the Atlantic Const- , F GLADDENS SORE, TIRED FEET “Tiz” makes sore, burning, tired ! feet fairly dance with delight. Away go the aches and pains, the corns, I callouses, blisters and bunions. I “Tiz” draws out the acids and poi ’ sons that puff up your feet No matter how hard you work, how long j you dance, how far you walk, or | how long you remain on your feet, j “Tiz” brings restful foot comfort ; 1 “Tiz” is wonderful for tired, ach -1 ing, swollen, smarting feet. Your | feet just tingle for joy; shoes never i hurt or seem tight. | Get a box of “Tiz” now from any j drug or department store. End ■ foot torture forever —wear smaller 1 shoes, keep your feet fresh, sweet and happy. ' lETTER93Wj£S Mr. Brown Was Not So Very Far Off, at That. BY CHARLES P. STEWART NEA Service Writer Washington, April IL—Herbert Janvrin Browne, the weather prophet | who declared last fall that the sum mers of 1926 and 1927 wouldn’t be summers at all, but that we might ex pect to shoot our Fourth of July fire works in the snow, got himself pooh poohed for his assertion. Blit just look at the spring we’ve had! Browne himself is not a scientist and doesn’t pretend to be. For the strictly scientific information he re quires, to enable him to peer into t’ne meteorological future, lie relies on specialists. . Originally Browne’s interest in the weather was purely incidental to oth er activities he was engaged in. He began his career as a newspaper man—a Washington correspondent. Now there are undercurrents in Washington—changing undercurrents —which it pays “big business" throughout the country to kitow all about. Early knowledge—if possible, advance knowledge—of the changes enagles “big business” to vaoid losses and make more money. A good Washington correspondent becomes sensitive to these changes. Browne did. So preveutly,he became a purveyor of such “inside” informa tion to a select list of “big business” clients. ** * ■ Browne’s theory wa* that the earth’s weather depends on the sun. He went to Sol’h observers for ad vice. The sun’s heat varies. They said—nut by very many degrees, but perhaps enough to count a great deal, translated into terms of terrestrial temperature. However, with a cool sun, some times tl)p earth was warm. The scientists had noted that. And it ♦ often happened, with the sun getting in its best licks, that the weather here was cold. They’d observed that, too. * * * Browpe was a sailor as well as a newspaper man-. AH for himself, lie evolved the idea that the ocean warms up and cools off, as the sun’s heat varies, and that the ocean’s currents spread the dif ference around. It takes three years, he estimates, knowing the currents us he does. Gladiolus Bulbs All Colors Gibson Drug Store SULPHUR CLEARS A PIMPLY SKIN Apply Sulphur as Told When Your Bkin Breaks Out Any breaking out of the skin on face, neck, arms or body is overcome quickly by applying Mentho-Sulphur. The pimples seem to dry right up and go away, declares a noted skin specialist. Nothing has ever been found to take the place of. sulphur as a pimple re mover. It fa harmless and inexpen sive. Just ask any druggist for a small jar of Rowles Mentho-Sulphur and use it like cold cream. For Free Sample Mail This Advertisement to WHITEHALL PHARMACAL CO , Inc. 598 Madison Ave. New York. N. Y. aildinvi Ss*vicf> -''TyV JUivC W. J. HETHCOX Chicken Feed Baby Chick time is here and we are here with the Right Feeds. Buttermilk Starting Mash for Baby Chicks Buttermilk Growing Mash For the Larger Chicks, and Buttermilk Laying Mash For Liens . Also Good Scratch Feeds Cheap cabarrus Cash gro cery company Phone 57 1 W • THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Static Is. Music Compared to This | £ l «w l - —,—— * d\ PIT OUR WAY BY WILLIAMS ~ j \ 1/60SH, D!DJa\ C SEEM'^ N \/wAti'LL He\ j Y / \ Mmr \ SEE ftovm Sick'V/RtGi-\rAWAV Fiwos /VT \ I /GritTfeP 1 ) '• -he. HEweM sand imthem \ ! 1 rrj ( J viME-M WJE. HELD DEAUM’ VMtTtA MO oC PAmTS 1 j J Q OOT FER A SiMPUMCxfoMS PocCtTs! he'll I 111 CEWf MORE, -Ti~V Ml Mule FimD HE.’“5 I COD 111 OPEKIED / DE ALtD 1 I X \ DIVIDE rr MV SOMEL ! J 1 l ePEERIOKICED/ L / k . LT.C?VNiIIiAM3 MOMEMtS VNE.O UKE."TO UUE o\l ER— +-,s SUCK FELLERS CI9Z6 BY WEA seRVICE -' Na k* "I IP" ■ ... I I - ■ ' . mom’n pop by taylor ( il/ 1 / ( AmV-AMY-COME ( _ VOU 7 LL HAvi W Q ~~ ~~ / BUAPt > ol ? STA/vJD THAT AUiFOL \ \ T t o/hiSr Beueve ] s novo l k>oowi you're // > I i\V,^ S IT— WHAT WAS V / ShelS UPSTAIRS vH FIBBIM6 - COUSIN S / ''Wc v. SHE D0IU&? J/ 1N) HeR . |2 ooW . , matilda IS TOO WEAK ) / * RUttPI XX)DCOOOOOOOCOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM j Don’t Be Misled, Look and see that j | ou get the yellow checkered Bag | [ and then you will know that you H I have got the original Startina to | | feed your baby chix on. j Cash Feed Store $ PHONE 122 SOUTH CHURCH ST. ,j| ocKX>oooooc>oooooooooooqooooooooo2<3ooooocoooooooooo W QcSi/nAfirL&j 1 jij o/ \i mmßmxmm u j |-j FANCY DRY GOODS WOMEN’S WEAR | * X>OOOOCKDCOCKXXJCKX>StXXXXX>DOOC>i & CXX -.OOOOOCXXXVX DELCO UGHT I Light Plants and Batteries Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter- ! j 8 nating current and Washing Machines for Direct or Al- \ W ft ternating Current. S R. H. OWEN, Agent g Phone 669 Concord, N. C. >0<xxxxj0cxx>0000«30c»cs000000c5<xx>00000000000cxxx500000l j BATTERIES || Big Price Reduction on Batteries for Fords and ::Bs Chevrolets I PREST-O-UTE $15.50 I' COLUMBIA $11.95 M Compare These Prices. I REPLACEMENT FOR ALL CARS PHONE 228 (Studebaker Sales and Service) ijjf Ha Auto Supply & Repair Co. J 9 CLEAN, PURE, COLD AIR Get More Than Your Money’s Worth Many Gurney users say they are getting more than their money’s worth IgP' from this long-lasting refrigerator. »|| „;. jL’ ■— Some Gurneys have been in use 25 to jtpj $ 50 years. They're built to last : also to ffijllj | preserve food perfectly with a mini- Hfiy J mum of ice. And you'll he surprised ilk • | ~j\p at the reasonable prices. We carry a llfp, S wide range of sizes. Come in and see H. B. WILKINSON j Out of the I Kent District, Where Parking Space Is Plentiful and time unlimited. J& ConcSrd Kannapolis, Mooresville China Grove M EHot Water a friend indeed of every cook match and in a few minutes steaming hot water will run Let us install one for you. Pays for itself quickly. E. B. GRADY PLUMBING AND HEATING DEALER Office and Show Room 39 E. Corbin St. Office Phone 334 W THE DAILY TRIBUNE I ane> |j THE PROGRESSIVE FARMER BOTH ONE TEAR AT THE FOLLOWING PRICES: In State outside Concord $5.25 (I The Progressive Farmer is the best farm paper published, and its H price is SI.OO a year. |H You need not pay for the Progressive Farmer at tlie same time you jo pay for The Tribune. We will get it for you a whole year at any time N on payment of only 25 cents. j 4 1 Pay your subscription to The Tribune to any contestant, but 8 - j tO . C . r^ UUe °^ CC jjj PAGE SEVEN
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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April 15, 1926, edition 1
7
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