PAGE FOUR m tra« Concord Daily Tnbune BHE Ra!L sauc i at* Editor IK* The Associated Press is exclusively Krat-- : ml B ews published herein. Afl rights of republics tien el spee ! JgpK lal dispatches herein are alee reserved. fm ' : Special Representative Kg FROST, LANDIS & KOHN wEfc' 225 Fifth Avenue, New Fork IK. ‘ Peoples’ Gas Building, Chicago 1004 Candler Building, Atlanta B . Entered as second class mail matter »t the postoffice at Concord, N. C., un g§| • der the Act of Uarch 3, 1879. i 9 H’’ SUBSCRIPTION RATES t* In the City of Concord by Carrier: 3 One Tear $6.00 JR-Ji Six Months 3.00 , jp Three Months 1.50 B One Month T .50 !i ■ Outside of the State the Subscription Is the Same as in the City IfK | Out of the city and by mail in North r¥ ; Carolina the following prices will pre- C tail: Jr One Tear $5.00 PL Six Months 2.50 ifcp Three Months 1.25 S Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a HF'l • Month ?- All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in Advance tl ' RAILROAD SCHEDULE In Effect Nov. 29, 1925. Northbound a No. 40 To New Tork 9 :28 P. M. R; No. 136 To Washington 5 :05 A. M. m No. 36 To New Tork 10:25 A. M. M No. 34 To New Tork 4 :43 P. M. No. 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M. t* No. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P. M. No. 32 To New Tork 9:03 P. M. K No. 30 To New Tork 1:55 A.M. Southbound l?f i. No. 45 To Charlotte 3:55 P. M. (o’ No. 35 To New Orleans 9:56 P. M. ti No. 29 To Birmingham 2 :35 A. M. 0 No. 81 To Augusta 5:51 A. M. No. 33 To New Orleans 8 :25 A. M. » No. < ILTo Charlotte 8 :05 A. M. 1 No. 135 To Atlanta 8:35 P. M. No. 89 To Atlanta 9:50 A. M. 1 No. 37 To New Orleans 10:45 A. M. Train No. 34 will stop in Concord t to take on passengers going to Wash -1 ington and beyond. Train No. 37 will stop here to dis ci charge passengers coming from be ~ yond Washington. ■* All trains stop in Concord except 1 No, 3S northbound. A, BIBLE'THOUGHT K —FOR TODAY— Bible Thought* memorised, will prove « priceless heritage in after years WAY TO LIFE He hat* shewed tliee, O man. what is good: and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?—Micah 6:8. MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL. To our patrons and friends we ex tend the season’s greetings with the hope that the Yuletide will be a sea son of particular pleasure and joy. And we add the wish that the New Year may bring fruition to nil cher ished dreams, and success ami liappi ~ ness to all. ENGLISH PUBLICITY FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Every North Carolinian will read with pride the following paragraphs from an article by C. It. Fay, the „ eminent English economist, which The University News Letter quotes from The Economic Journal of the Royal Economic Society, London: A citizen of North Carolina can say with truth all these things: “My house, or rather the house in which I live, is made of wood which quite probably was cut from the moun tain forests of my state. It is lighted with the cheapest electricity in the U. S. A. My furniture was made at High Point. N. C.. a furni ture town second only in its output to Grand Rapids (Mich.) and rejoicing in a Furniture Exposition Building with six acres of .floor space. My kitchen utensils were made at Badin. N. C., on the Yadkin River, the sec ond largest Aluminum plant in the world. My towels OH me from Kan napol s, N. C., the world’s largest tow el mills: my table covers from Roa noke Rapids. N. C.. the largest da mask mills in the S. A. “My State prqduces more cotton goods than any other except Massa chusetts : $52 millions in 1912, $229 millions in 1922. The stockings which I and my family wear were knitted at Durham. N. the hosiery center of this continent. It is the fault or va gary of our digest’ve system if I eat any but native-grown foods-—grape fruit and bananas excepted. For my State, which some years ago was twenty-seoond in the list, is now fourth in agricultural production, fol i , lowing Texas, Illinois and lowa." Thus we find the name of North Carolina carried into English homes by a noted Englishman’s newspaper story. We are getting publicity the world over luid we are living up to the fine things being said about us. P North Carolinians have every reason p to be progd of their Btatg and they I should take pride in themselves for fc- after all the progress of their State j&: is nothing more than a reflection of fe their own progressiveness. Natural It resource-, we have had all the time, yet f our people are just beginning to cash K (in on them. The opportunities are 4, gregt in North Carolina how because the citizens of the State are creating the opportunities. BUILDING IN NORTH CAROLINA H Building ami ei win erring contracts Ba awgrded ‘in North Carolina during | tbyr month of November to g $6(382.500. according to the most au | thotitative statistics available. This l was a decrease of 33 per cent, from October, but an increase of 30 per cent over November of last year. The month’s record Included: $2,- 228,900 or 35 per cent, of all con-, struction, for public worka and utili ties; $1,289,700, or 20 per cent for i 1 residential buildings: $916,000, or 16 per cent, far educational buildings; and $745,000, or 12 per eent., for commercial buildings. Total construction started in North Carolina during the past elevten) months has amounted to $98,752,400. This is a 36 per cent, increase over the first eleven months of last year, and a 22 per cent, increase over the twelve months of last year. “WORKING UP” EVIDENCE AGAINST LEDGERS. The House declined to forbid dry agents from “working up” evidence against bootleggers by‘ruses and plots, but General Andrews, the prohibition chief, comes along with the warning that agents who squander money while getting evidence will be dropped from the service. The majority of the people, includ ing those persons who favor prohibi tion, think little of the practice of agents who snoop around and by trick succeed in purchasing liquor from a bootlegger, and the practice becomes especially unpopular when huge sums of money are spent for such evidence, j There is a case where agents spent SI,OOO working up one case. The! ’legged probably was not fined enough ; to pay the expenses in the case. TODAY’S EVENTS Thursday. December 24, 1925 Christmas Eve! There is an old tradition that bread baked on this date will never grow mouldy. Among the peasantry of Europe there is a belief that if the light is let go out on Christmas Eve some j one in the house will die within a year. In Trinity churchyard. New York | City, a wreath will be placed today | on the grave of Clement Moore, auth or of “ 'Twas the Night Before Christ-j mas,!’, Today, for’thc first time, all govern- j ment departments and independent es- 1 tablishments in Washington. D. C..! are to close for a three-day holiday. The President and Mrs. Coolidge tonight will again demonstrate their neighborly spirit by attending the dedication of a big community Christ mas tree and taking part in the carol I singing. According to announcement made at ! the headquarters Os the National Bu j reau for the Advancement of Music. j some 2,000 towns and cities of the j United States have arranged for or ganized Christmas carol singing to-j night. This evening Pope Pitts is to close j and seal the holy door in the basilica I of St. Peter’s, thus announcing in the | presence of pilgrims from all ends of the earth, the close of the twenty third jubilee year recorded by hie-! tory. The navy's traditional "sweethearts and wives" Christmas Eve toast will be given at eight bells tonight in the wardrooms of American warships! wherever they may be on the seven! seas. Undoubtedly (he Christmas j spirit will run just as high aboard j the war vessels as in the days before it became necessary to drink the toast in distilled water. EMBARRASSING MOMENTS New York Mirror. 1 saw a middle-aged man. who re sembled a friend of mine, on the street. I rail after him and slapped ! him oil the back. “Hello!” I began, j and stopped almost overcome. It was > a stranger. Wishing to make a good impression j on a girl the first time I took her) out, I walked into a restaurant. When I the bill came around I realized that I would not have enough money to j cover the bill and tip, the waiter. I , placed a dollar on the table resolved | to take it away when she was not j looking, but she returned and say my • performance. I was feeling very tired and warm and had to hang on to a strap in the subway. When the train made a sudden turn I found myself fumbling about like a drowning person. A lit tle boy who was seated beside his father said : “Oh, daddy, doesn't that man swinging around remind you of the dm Liken man we saw in the street ?” BRIDEGROOM ARRESTED WITH LIQUOR IN AUTO Waxhaw Man on Way to Claim Char lotto Girl When Officers Nab Him and Best Man. Salisbury, Dec. 23.-—A tnan from Waxhaw on his way to Charlotte to be married, who was held here when officers found whiskey in his car and afoo in him, is still in jail, but will be brought to county court tomorrow 'to have his case further considered. He was fined $25, but Ims been unable to raise Ihe amount. His best man, who was accompanying him, was sent up lot 30 days, but today that sen tence was changed to a $25 fine and lm has retflrneij to him home in Greensboro. The men were arrested when their ear stalled just after they had made a left turn at a corner in the busi ness section of the city, where no left turn, is allowed. Tlie would-be groom pleaded to be allowed to pro ceed to where his bride wqs await ing him, hut even the display of bis wedding ring was not sufficient to cause the “cop” to lot him proceed. Btudy, ; oi.'Washington's traoMMir tuQou •iowssthat ..it' oasts »*« car -driver there IL# cents a mile to run his automobile. Silence is golden. Thlff may ex plain why there are few rich men in politic*. LOCARNO—HOPES AND FEARS. Dearborn Weekly. Hymns to Locarno have been many and fulsome; we join ia the.hopetbat they wiU all come true. Failure to join in the hymn should not be in terpreted as antagonism to the hope. If two assumptions were true, Lo carno might mean much. That is, if it\were true that there is or was any possibility of war in the next quar ter-century over the Franco-German boundary, and if it were true that nations regard diplomatic signatures as binding in desperate circumstances, Locarno might be said to have given standing ground for preliminary ef forts toward the prevention of war. But since it was not at all probable that the next war would start over the question of the German boundary, and hardly possible that it shahid be started by Germany at all, or eyen by France; and since it is not prob* able that any nation would honor its signature at the risk of its national life, the whole matter leaves the world just about where it found it- With this possible exception—that Locarno may indicate a new temper, a new good will, which ujay spread. The agreement as it stands does not take in the more active war centers and makes no provision for the restraint of the more probable war makers in Europe. The assumption that France and Germany, once restrained, will keep the peace of Europe does not seem based in-fact. What is done is precisely what cir cumstances would have required in any ease, namely, thpt Britain is called in as umpire in any war that might be started. It gives Britain the balance of power, as between France and Germany, in military mat ters, a position which she occupied without Locarno and" which has been foreshadowed in every agreement pro posed by her. The most that can be said is that if Franee is truly suffering from fear, the word of Britain might have some effect in allaying that fear. But if she is suffering from revanche, Lo carno may permit her to become more provocative. Whereas, Germany, if she had no intention of making war. is just where she was before. And if she intends making war she has an advantage she did not possess the last time in knowing the opposing lineup. The remainder of Europe, the really dangerous parts, the Lo carno plan scarcely touches. However, the circumstances have been most difficult, and if the states men really have found an element of peace and have utilized it and fixed it intoi the European structure, time will declare it. And time alone will deelare it. There has been a rather noticeable overflow of iiolitieal adver tisement accompanying the business thus far. Solid contributions are not usually of the kind to receive so big an initial boost. Thos who await the verdict of time will be wise. “Wet” Money From Abroad? Dearborn Weekly. ‘“Pussyfoot” Johnson may be right in saying that the anti-prohibition agitation in the United States is be ing maintained by European interests. When the United States went dry. it rocked the liquor business the whole world round. Even now there is more about the "failure” of prohibi tion in Britisli journals than in all the “wet" newspapers of the United States. American visitors are con stantly interviewed and when a “wet" is found, his testimony is painted on the skies. Yet the concensus of re turning British visitors from America is that the thing works and that li quor smuggling has greatly lowered Britain in American esteem. If prohibition is as inefficient as the “wets” say it is, why do they wish it abolished or-modified? Their profits are surely greuter under a non-en forced law. But If prohibition is ef ficient. and if 4s shown in state after state, and test vote after test vote, the country is unchangeably dry, why docs the “wet” impaganda continue. Does any "wet" propagandist honstly expect that the United States will ev er he "wet” again? Then why Lie continued hue and cry? Probably “Pussyfoot" John son has the clue. The example of the "dry" United States is exercis ing a mighty influence on Europe. There is a silent change of attitude toward liquor. Who would have fore cast, even five years ago. that the city of Glasgow would abolish liquor at its official functions? Yet that has come to pass. "the business’’ is not I so respectable ns it once was. When a great lord recently arose and said tnat "whisky won the war” because the by-products of the distilleries went into the munition shops and also made yeast for bakers, it was prompt ly pointed out that America, without whisky for munitions or yeast, played no mean part in the matter. If the “trade” could get rid of that constant reference of America, it would he vastly worth while. Worth enough to pay gold into the American “wet” campaign, anyway. Tariff on Toys Takes tIOOJMO.OOO Worth of Joy Out of Christmas. Washington. Dec. 23.—The tariff duty of 70 per cent, on toys was de scribed today by Representative Hull, Democrat, Tennessee, as taking “wqch of the Christmas'joy from the children us America.” The amount of tlie tagiff levy in excessive and extortionate prices on American children for their toys dur ing Christmas, lie said in a stateq.mil, will easily approach $106,000,000. The American tariff beneficiaries were enabled to fix this rate on toys in the turiff law by dramatising the ghost of German competition. ’ Mr. Hull de clared Germany was no longer a se rious coimietilor of this country in toy manufacturing and dsclared teb tax was an "economic outrage.” Tlie Chinese do not bury their dead underground until a ”lneky day’’ (topics, -tbs corpses often being kept in wood*n boxes for many days as centers of disease lijfeirtfon. Walking is not a "loKt art” in Berlin, for hundreds of thousands of jietlcHtrians fill the parks and boule vards on pleasant evenings and Sun days. 1 THE CONCOfttf DXILY TftifcUNß BEHIND THE SCENES IN A 1 MOVIE ntODUCBE’S WORK Chick Foil of Hard Work But One of Most Interesting in the World. New York. Dec. 24. —OP)—The life ot-n movie producer is chockfull full of hard work, but by admission is one of the most interesting in the world. He spendn million*; of dollars in carrying cut ah annual production program. He reads aud sees all the best plays and many of the bad ones. He thinks nothing or ordering a com pany “on location” in Europe, Alas ka, Porto Rico, or the Sahara. Act ors, outhors playwrights, poets, artists, models, directors, statesmen, royalty and financiers are to be found among his acquaintances. Take Jesse L. Lasky. When he comes to his office in the morning, on his desk in a long summary of tele grams and cablegrams from the world over. A story has beeu purchased especially for a star. A director has been selected. The producing depart ment has obtained actors of the supporting parts, Locations have been selected. The producing depart ment has obtained actors of the sup porting parts. Locations have been designated. 11l fact, everything vir tually is ready for actual work to begin. But here is a telegram to the ef fect that the star does not like the role: neither does shq care for the story, and is in tears over the pros pect of having to do it. "One of the necessities of good work is happiness in doing it.” said Mr. Lasky "If the star is an im- 1 port ant one and advances good reasons for not doing the picture, the whole thing has to be postponed and another actor found or another secenario selected. I have to decide what is to be done.” "There also is a cable from Sing laud. saying the company’s option’ is about to expire on a very important literary work. Another message* from a company on location gives the news that raiu has so delayed work as to - send expenses of the production far 1 above the budget. Should the scenario be recast, omitting the scenes in j question, or should the company re main a few days longer in the hope of improved weather? The telephone rings and a play-| "■right tells him that the big Broad- j way success on which he had bid ' $50,060 and had virtually closed the deal, lias attracted a better offer from \ another producing company. Will Mr. Lasky raise the ante? In walks his secretary with word j that a niece of a cabinet lucinher | has presented a letter of introdue- | tiou. She is beautiful and wants to ! get into the movies. Or it may be a French or Itmwian man or woman of title with the same ambitilpi. j Ordinarily, an aide would handle applicants, but owing to the impor- ; tance of the introduction, Mr. Lasky ! sees the person. He then is late to an j engagement with one of his favorite j stars, or is past due at the projection j room, where a new photoplay awaits | his criticism. Luncheon, and sometimes dinner. iH devoted to a business conference with officials of the company, play wrights. authors and actors. There arc men to be sent to Europe to ob tain material for a big production. Uiqiorta on productions already being exhibited must be read and oc-. casionally changes are to be made. A man who has spent months in the African jungles has- completed a picture which the company may de sire. Another photographer wants to go to the Arties to make a film- Thomas Meighau may want a Vaca tion. Another dtr may ask a raise in salary. These—and a thousand other questions—riie producer must de cide. not a small one being the var ious legal affairs. Horsemeat Becomes French' Luxury With Rising Prices. Paris, Dec. 23. —(/Tb—Horsemeat. formerly “the poor man's beefsteak.” has become a French luxury. Scar city of buteherable animals is given hh the cause of its enormous increase i n price. One pound of choice horsemeat at the local market recently was quot ed 9.56 frans—about forty cents. Pork chaps could be had for 8-56, roast beef, for 9.06 and mutton for 7.56. Besides the gradual disappearance of horses "on the hoof" available for the markets, a tax of one franc twenty-five centimes per pound plac ed on the meat was said to have in fluenced higher prices. Horaemeat is recommended by physicians for persons suffering from tuberculosis and all diseases of anaemia of the blood. The sanator iuinw of Southern Franee liuve been severely hit by the -rise in price. —PERFUME— The Perfect Gift D'Orsay, presents their perfumes to the increasing demand of the Ameri can woman, who always knows, seeks the best, who tyves the beautiful and insists on quality. ouEtnts Chevalier, To jours. Fidele, Chnrme, Mimosa, Chypre, Rose Jaquimiuot, Myguet, Jasmine Sold Exclusively By Gibson Drug Store The Rexall Store WANTED To supply your needs in Ap ples, Oranges, Candies, Nuts and Raisins., Special Prices pn Quantities for Christmas Tf*ees.T ; Cabarrus Cash v Grocery Co. . -r— --! Haft** J Copyright 19M-25. P. F. Collier A Son Co. and O. P. Putnam's Son* “BOBBED HAIR” with Marie Prevoet Is a plcturlsaUoa of this story hr 1 Warner Bros. Pictures, lae. SYNOPSIS Connemara Moon hour to have on to ua fed her engagement tonight, but, nstead, she stole away from Aunt ? elimena*s Connecticut home and has igured in a long series of exciting ad tentures on Long Island yachts. And tow Auntie and her lawyer, Brewster, earching for the girl, find themselves \hoard another strange vessel. Salt ■nstall jtdams, one of Connie’s suitors, t trying to explain his identity to the tysierious Sweetie. CHAPTER Ell—Continued She giggled. “How stupid. You’re lither the Prime Minister of Por ugal or an admiral in th< Swiss tavy.” ) Saltonstall Cabot Adams strug {led into a sitting postifre. “Eor >od’s sake, Miss O’Reilly, be rea onable." Sweetie was human. “Don't agi ate yourself, dearie.” She sat dawn teside him. “You're in good com jany. None of these folks—” she ndicated with a nod the rough lads vho had taken command of the ab icnt Mr. Harvey’s motor boat— “is locial register, but Ufhy’r? good dock. You can’t tell what a couple if generations of money wilt do for .hem. Now, your folks started heir nest egg by cheating the In tians. These boys——” “Mfss O’Reilly—” he was very tamest. “I haven't a doubt your riends are charming, delightful, perhaps a little abrupt”—he rubbed nis shoulder—“but perfectly splen did Yale boys. But what are they doing here and where are we going und—for Lord’s sake, don’t lean up •gain that shoulder.” GFHDHFGJD “We can’t make no landing here abouts." Sweetie drew herself away stiffly. “Beg’ pardon. I hadn't meant to presume on the informality of the occasion.” “Miss O’Reilly, don’t misunder stand me 1" • She smiled gently.* “Oh, I don’t.” Then her expression relaxed into something that bordered kindness. “I know. The Swede fetched you a clip on the shoulder. Well, I’m sorry. I’m almost sorry I tried to get your goat. But you’ll admit it was a golden opportunity after all the welfare work you and your fam ily have done for me and the likes of me. It used to be a real treat for all of us little shopgirls to be herded out on our one Saturday afternoon-off to a ‘picnic’ at yotjr mother's place and be read a paper on ‘Browning’s Influence on the Aztecs’ and another on the 'budget system.’ when you’re making cight ftfty a week.” Saltonstall Cabot Adams blushed. “I’m sorry, Miss O’Reilly. I can sge now how little that must have benefited you in your chosen career pf, say, rum running.” “Wrong again.” said Sweetie. “Only the coarser natures go in for that gort of thing," “Then what is it?” / . " She glanced up at the heavens. “ ‘Last night- the moon had a golden .rim,’ You don’t get nothing put of ( ine, except abuse. Here—” she took off her jacket and rotted it into ia pillow—“lean -your Shoulder up j against that. It’ll be eakier." j I|e looked at her. “You’re very I kind,” i“Yes, I am,” she snapped. "But here’s where our conversation ends. 1 IT you’re sensible you’ll lay low and finconspicuous from this on.” And jto strengthen her point Sweetie ' aaovgd away. In tli" January issue of True -De tective Mysteries, a Maefaddeu pub lication. you will find various excit iug stories of murders, of strange hap pening* and how different detectives wprk.to solve erhnes. , For instances, liifrc? are ‘'7*l" Singular Methods of ■L Hhmplirey Howelis ’ aml what hap pened "hen’ lie and old Jim Devsry of the police department clashed on the Hark ness case. “Murder For B*]e” concerns itself with the killing of Barnett Bass. the New York chick en king, snd is’told by Captain *Wil- Meanwhile the rough lads, one ol whom Sweetie had referred to a* Swede, had the boat running rapid ly, though by no means quietly. Valiantly she nosed into the heavy sea and she left a pathway of churn ing silver behinddier. It was real ly rather beautiful, but no one no ticed it. “You’re t 6 put me ashore,” saick. Pooch. “When I get good an’ ready," said the Swedish person. “We came out here to fetch something and we ain’t fetched it yet.” . Pooch squirmed. “I tell you it’s dangerous.” “Who’s there to be afraid of now we’ve shook the Scotchman?" Pooch shrugged N his shoulder*. “You can’t shake a Scotchman. He’s probably stickin’ to the side of this very boat now. I tell there was something uncanny in the way he disappeared—or didn’t. And the girl ” "You’re'seein’ things,” interject ed Doe, who was listening. “I’m Hot seein’ ’em. That’s what makes me suspicious,” “Shut up,” said the Swede. “We can’t make no landing •hereabouts, anyway.” The Swede was a big man and He had away of. speaking with authority. “So we’re goin’ right on to 'where we started for.” ’ Pooch bided his time, but he was not convinced. Meanwhile his eyet watched the figure that had been s« casually stowed aboard. Eventu ally the figure stirred. He was sH but suffocated by the sail cloth that had been wrapped around him, He was bruised and sore. He wasn’t at all sure, either, what had hap pened. By some maneuvering h* managed to peer out through a hole in the canvas. At first h{ could sec nothing. Very cautiously be made himself free of the canvas If they thought he was done for, sc much the better. He would lie low until the time came. Then all a) oncev Lacy’s heart turned over witt a jerk. There, huddled in a coat close beside him, was someofie with a rakish white turban. “Connemara." He whispered it but above the sound of the engint no one could him. The figure in the turban started but did not speak or turn her hepd “I—l thought you’d got awaj with McTish. Oh, I wish to God you had.” The figure beside him started again. Lacy stretched forth an gphing but would-be assuring, arm. “1 coqld have sworn you went over tht side with him just at the moment ) was engaging these other vandals You’re not hurt?” The figure shook her head with out turning around. “What a night!” said Lacy. “1 like my adventure, but I like if toned down to the drawiog-roow pitch a bit more than this." Hi stopped. “And I don’t cart about having you mixed up in this either." Lacy had away of masculine pro tectiveness that almost never failed to charm. The figure in the turban knew this technique was as old a> Adam and also th*£ it was only by some absurd floundering of chanco that she was its recipient, but sho experienced a entirely pleasurable thrill. Certainly she had a right to play this game a little longer. This gen tleman knew a great many things she wanted to know, that she had a right to know. Besides which there was something curiously familiar about him. She hadn't seen his face, of course, but his voice and his manner were remipiscent, "Would you care what happened to me?" the figure in the turban whispered. “Care—” J His voice indicated there whs no word in English wor thy of conveying the intensity of his emotion. “Os course I care, a great deal more than usual, so much more I’m getting a little dis turbed about it. I’v? cared #» many times before," he went op with agTeeabl? candor, “that I can recognize all the symptoms. I'm no amateur earer. I have cared in every capital,in Europe.” “Really—” ’’*** “It’s a compliment, of course, to be admired by one who comes with a record of taste and accomplish ment behind him.” t The figure in the turban cleared her throat. “There aye two school* on that subject.” ‘ * Connemara—— ’’ The figure did not move. (To be continued) —i" ■ , Ham A. Jone*. who worked ou the cnee. "Subbing for Suita Chum" U the experience of Detective Mar tin Nolan ami turn to do with Slip pery A inly Garwon. ex-jail bird and a robbery that did not come off. , Local anti-barberry laws were passed in Ttance as early ,aa lflflff. The common barberry was completely eradicated from Denmark in 11)08, since which time no black stem rust in wheat has been noticed there. BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. "HOLIDAY GIFT NUMBERS /* -«T .(,? l x Here are gifts for home adorn ment, intimate, thoughtful, useful and above aU, wanted. For no mat ter how particular the person you are giving to may be, or how well furnished his home, there is always \ - - some niche he would like filled — with lamps,' chairs, book table or screen. Come, search through the holi t day display in our store for your gift -man gifts and woman gifts are here, likewise gifts for all ages and purses. P. S.-Beginning Monday die 14th we will be open evenings until 9:00 o’clock. BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. 0 Money is too scarce to C£L j spent for any kind of IfJB equipment that Is not tirely dependable. We jB would not offer any elec trienl equipment that —J lacked the guarantee of mal its maker to us. Our T guarantee to you is that. any motive ■ equipment g pLH bought here must give sat- L|l “Fixtures of CtiSracter” A Kjl W. i. HETiICOX j W. Depot Si. Phone 6ft» jjj Give Huylers this ■ > 4 Xmas Pearl Drug Co. Phones 22 and 722 Thursday, Dec. 24, 1025 We carry at all times a complete line of genuine Buick parts, will be I glad to supply you. i STANDARD BUICK CO. * Opposite City Fir.' department CHRISTMAS" ONE AvNO l Heap vt\warmfor * SANTA’S ICAUI^SJV* The ideal sort of Christmas tide is.one that is cold out on the fields and up in the jng star-studded sky but warm ?s a generous heart in the in terior of your own home. We j deal in home comforts. . --v • v i, , - | r CONCORD PLUMBING ' COMPANY % n 3 174 Kerr St. Phone 576