PAGE FOUR
Fhe Concord Daily Tribune
1 J. B. SHERRILL
Editor and Publisher
W. M. SHERRILL, Associate Editor
I MBMBICR OP THE
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is exclusively
entitled to the use for.republication of |
•11 »ewß credited to it or not otherwise
credited in this paper and also the lo
•eal news published herein.
All rights of republics tion of spec
ial dispatches herein are alas reserved.
Special Representative ’
FROST, LANDIS A KOHN
?25 Fifth Avenue, New York
r feopl-s ’ Gas Building, Chicago
1004 Ccudler Building, Atlanta
Entered as second class mail matter
at the postoffice at Concord, N. C., un
der the Act of March 3, 1879.
; SUBSCRIPTION RATES
In the City of Concord by Carrier:
• One Year $6.00
Six Months 3.00
niree Months 1.60
; One Month -50-
Outside of the State the Subscription
Is die Same as in the City
Out of the city and by mail in North
Carolina the following prices will pre
' m 3:
One Year $5.00 ,
Six Months 2.50
Three Months 1-25
Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a (
Month
All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in .
Advance
RAILROAD SCHEDULE l
In Effect Jan. 30, 1026.
Northbound
No. 40 To New York 0 :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 I*. M.
No. 46 To Danville 3 :15 P. M.
No. 12 To Richmond 7 :10 P. M.
No. 32 To New York 9:03 P. M.
No. 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.
No. 29 To Birmingham 2 :35 A. M
No. 31 To Augusta 5:51 A. M
No. 33 To New Orleans S:ls 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 comm; from be
yond Washington.
All trains stop in Concord except
No. 38 northbound.
1 1]
I X—FOR TODAY—I
|i| Bible Thoagt.ta memorized, will prove a (gl
BJ priceless heritage in after year* ( S|
GOD’S GOOD GIFTS :—The Lord
will give grace and glory: no good
thing will he withhold from them that
walk uprightly.—Psalm 84:11.
THE PEOPLE SHOULD BE CON
SIDERED.
R. A. Doughton, who has charge of
the State bureau which issues auto
license tags, has ruled that many of
the sub-stations maintained last year
for the convenience of the auto own
ers of the State are to be discontin
ued this year.
Last year there were 62 towns and
cities in which the licenses could be
secured. That year the total has been
cut to 22. The new ruling means
that Concord and Cabarrus people
must go to Charlotte or Salisbury to
get their tags.
Commissioner Doughton argues, we
believe, that the sub-stations were op
erated at great eost to the State.
Practically everything at Raleigh is
operated at expense, still the opera
tions have not been halted. It seems
to us that the people should con
sidered. The sub-stations were of
great convenience to the people and
after all these people pay the taxes.
• Certainly they pay the taxes by
which the auto license bureau is oper
ated and so long as they don’t kick
.. we don’t see where the commissioner
• bas any kick coming.
Homebody else s lieard from on the
matter of the automobile license tag
distribution. The High Point Enter
prise :
‘*lf High Point must go to Greens
boro for license plates, it*werc better
- that the local motorist have recourse
by mail direct to Raleigh.
“The contract with the motor club
for distribution has been signed. The
expense allowance has been cut. Six
ty-two offices were kept open last
year; 20 will be kept open this. We
suggest that the chamber of commerce
take a hand in this matter of general
interest now. High Point will be
wanting to know promptly that the
several thousands of license plates
*■ needed here will not require several
thousand needless trips to Greens
boro.”
THE PRESIDENT'S COAL POLICY
Tho New York World, learning
that President Coolidge and the Re
publican Steering Committee have
agreed not to do anything about coal
at this session of Congress, offers the
following as “Mr. Coolidge's record on
the subject of coal:”
jT 1923—Strike. Recommends study
of proposals made by Coal Commis
sion.
1024. No strike. No 1
tioia-.
fe' 1925—Strike. Recommends Coal
Commission proposals.
1920 —No strike.' No recommenda
tions.
i; Jke World contends that “there
4a;. a . good ehouce of another strike
book,' if not on anthracite, then in bi
tuminous," and it predicts that when
the strike comes “Mr. Coolidge will
anrtbnncc that he can do nothing be:
can# Congress has not given him the
' power to act.” “If the public bc
ftarws it,” continues the world, “then
i the public will believe anything.”
Coal is a rather dangerous subject
for a politician, therefore the Presi
dent is letting it alone. Os course
during the anthracite strike, just
when a settlement was certain, the
“spokesman” of the White House
came forth with the Information that
government agencies had been at
work all along trying to brigg about
a settlement. This came the day af
ter the same “spokesman” had told
the world that despite a request from
Congress, the President was going to
do nothing. t In other words, the
White House tried to leave the im
pression that the Coolidge adminis-:
tration brought about the settlement |
when as a matter of fact the President :
has done nothing for fear of making |
somebody mad. j
CAN SMITH QUIT?
Governor A1 Sm:th announced some
time ago that he was ready to quit
politics. He is not going to be a
candidate again, he said, for the gov
ernorship of New York.
It seems probable now that he will
have to run again or quit in the face
or Republican opposition. The Leg
islature of the State refhses to do
anything the Governor wants, making
t almost necessary for him to run
again or leave undone those things
he told the people he would try to
get done.
Just why the New York Republi
cans want to keep Governor “Al”
from quitting politics is rather hard
for an outsider to understand. They
have no chance in the world to defeat
him, whereas they might defeat some
other Democrat. Governor Smith
wants to quit office, we believe, still
we \loubt that he will do it so long
as tho Republicans ins : st on defeat
ing every proposition he sponsors.
DOESN’T LOOK GOOD.
R. R. Clark in Greensboro News.
The commissioner of internal reve
nue has ruled that the President’s sal
ary is not liable to the income tax.
wherefore Mr. Coolidge receives a re
bate of and will pay no income
taxes on his $75,000 per hereafter.
The question of the liability of the
presidential salary to the income tax
was raised during Harding’s term.
Harding paid the tax ami it is said
the estate will receive a rebate of
$26,000. The internal revenue* com-!
mission er’s ruling is based on the de
cision of the Supreme court that tlie
salaries of federal judges are not tax- ,
able. The North Carolina Supreme
court held similarly, it will be recall
ed as to state judges and state tax.
The court decisions as to judicial
salaries was based in each case on
the provision of the constitution which
says that salaries of judges shall not
be diminished during their continuance
in office. Obviously that was intend
ed to prevent hostile legislative bod
:es legislating judges out of office by
cutting their pay. Just how taxing
the judicial salary at the same rate j
that is imposed on all and sundry
could be held as “diminishing’’ the j
salary within the meaning of the con- j
stitution only the judicial mind can i
fathom. Rut the judges have invar-:
: nbly found for themselves and ns they :
are the last word iu the matter, hav- j
ing the power to exempt themselves j
from taxes, the decision stands. I
Just how the judicial salary dec is-1
ion is construed as exempting the]
President isn’t explained, but it is I
presumed that the internal revenue
commissioner actiMl on uie rilling of
the attorney general’s office. Rut it
doesn’t look good, tlrs exempting offi
cial salaries from taxes. It savors of
preferential treatment that is con
trary to the spirit of a democratic
country.
* 1
New Handy Pack
More for yottt money
and the best Peppermint
Chewing Sweet for any money
j ”1 AIN’T GOT NO MA"
[ TXie Uplift.
k : The other day The Concord. Trib-.
• une carried a statement that there
k wer;e nine boys in one of the oity
• school rooms that did not have a
' change of underclothes and their con-1
: dition was impressing itself upon the
: comfort and agreeableness of t’ac
: room. The King’s Daughters issued ,
a distressed call.
Right on the heels of this call
John J. Rarnhardt, who -rejoices in
1 doing helpful deeds, and others, re
' sponded to the occasion. C!o»h was
! j secured from certain mills and car- !
• j ried to t'he school rooms. Little j
pants were, fitted on the boys from!
I the Kings’ Daughter®* closet (a great j
I idea in itself), and then the boys j
j were asked to carry home certain
quantities of the cloth to their moth-
J ers to have it converted into proper
underclothes.
All save one seemed gloriously hap
py as they held up their little hands
in accepting the propositio—all. save
one. “Well, Johnnie, do you not
agree to carry home some of this
doth and have your mother to make
you some nice, clean underclothing?”
lie was psked. The little fellow,
poorly clad, dirty and unkept but
with honesty in his eyes, sadly re
plied :
‘“I ain’t got no tna de^d —
and my grandma can't do anything
like that.”
Here is a condition in the midst
of an apparent plenty—some are
troubled in knowing how to spend
their money; others troubled in know
ing how to get clothing to cover their
nakedness atid food to sustain their
bodies. It makes no difference that ;
somebody has failed to do his duty,
t’.iese children are not responsible—!
they came into the world without be-'
ing consulted —and it is a glorious
thought that men and women among
us. forgetful of their own comforts
and conveniences, freely volunteer to
right wrongs that occur here and ev
erywhere.
The world is growing better—some
times mightly slowly—but it has good
impulses and right will some day pre
vail. We are our brother’s keeper,
is more and more being accepted.
' He Didn’t Trade.
Gee McGee, the humorist, of Ander
son. S. C, says in The Daily Mail:
A man offered me a beautiful
mountain lot only fifteen miles from
Rrevnrd last week for only $5,125.
This price included the war tax and
one telephone pole. This lot measured #
! fifty feet in front and ran back into
j the mountain a distance of 02 feet
1 and then up toward the sky -4.1 feet
I have not decided whether I would
to tunmel a hole into it and j
build in the hole, or have all t’iiat |
dirt dug out and hauled off.
was mighty scarce where this lot was j
being offered. You can stand at the
foot of it and look in every direction
and there was not a speck of real
estate anywhere near there. I am
sorry that land is getting so scarce
up in the mountains. There seems
to be plenty of it down here wher
you can plow and hoe and make 41
■ living by working. I didn’t trade.
A Hot I>rayer.
! The Roanoke News printes the fol
i lowing fervent prayer which a eol
| ored minister made in behalf of a j
i brother minister; “O. Lord, gib him
j the eye ob de eagle dat he may spy
| out Sin afar off. Lay his hands on
| the gospel plow. Tie his tongue on
| the line ob truth. his heart on
1 de gospel pole. Row his head down
I between his knees and his knees
down in some lonesome, dark and
narrow valley where prayer is much
wanted to be made. Noint him tv id
de kerosine tie of salvation and sot 1
him oil fire.”
New York (.Tty has more than a 1
hundred languages and over a thou
sand dialects.
THE CONCO&b DAILY TRIBUNE
j Published by arrangement with Flrat National Picture*, Inc.
1
I p THE story thus far
Joanna, pretty, ultra-modern,
thop girl is informed by her em
ployer, Gordon, that an unknown
man has given her a million dollars
to spend as she wishes. There are
no strings to the gift —no condi
tions to meet —she is not even to
know,the name of her benefactor.
Rhe endeavors in vain to learn
more from banker, Eggleston,
where she meets his nephew Bran
don, a man-about-town, who helps
her write her first check and tells
Joariha that he intends to make
love to her. Dazed with the amount
Os money, hurt by the fact that hfr
shop girl companions and the mer
chants with whom she deals, spend
ing her new found fortune, believe
her to have gone the limit‘d se
curing the money, she returns
home that night expecting to meef
John, her hopelessly “old-fash
ioned" girlhood sweetheart.
CHAPTER VI. (Continued)
This had been Joanna. The
very breath of her, the rest and
the pretense of her. It was Imita
tion fur, but good enough to serre
Its purpose Its lines had the
ewagger. even If its lining was only
mercerized 'cotton. Mrs. Adams
had marvelled often at the uncom
plaining patience with which a girl
like Jo could put her hunger into a
.thing like this —the hungers that
ten and fifteen cent lunches, and I
scantier breakfasts, piled. She !
shook her head dubiously. The j
trouble that had been in her eyes j
deepened to an inward sadness i
B>e took the coat into her own i
rorni, laid it across the foot of her
'bed tenderly and then brought the j
JSOC note, which she folded and
•lipped into the handkerchief pock
•t in tre coat lining. Then she sat
town te think, forgetting all about
the flowers on the table in the
"drawing room only ".
Upstairs Joanna was trying also
to think. She sat down on the
bed and put her chin in her hand,
her elbow propped on a crossed
knee. But the room imprisoned
her too tightly. The walls, dotted
here and there with photographs
es boys, a movie star or two and a
framed lithograph of Niagara
Falls, pressed in on her and suffo
tated her. She more space.
With al! that money in her bag,
knd with more, all the jnoney In
the world, more than she ever pos
•ibly could get rid of. she must get
•ut again, out onto the street
where the crowds were, Into the
•tores, and buy, buy. buy!
She’d never been able to buy,
Joanna hadn’t. Always she’d had
to shop and haggle. The fellow
who ran the store in the office dis
trict, where she bought (limy,
sheer things of tinted crepe de
chines, hfe'd collapse when she
shoujfi walk In, call for his fan
ciest sets with real hand worked
lace on them, the ones he hung in .
his showcases for the same reason
Cohen hung the mink in his win
dow—when she should walk In,
eali for these expensive sets and
pay the price withoul haggling him
down a dollar or two. She’d go
around there now! Tomorrow
after she’d talked with John to
night she could take an hour or
two and think Think what to do
*nd how."
She slipped out without seeing
Mrs. Adams. At the corner' she
hailed a taxi and fllbat first to the
qhop where the dainty things tn
ere# were. But she- was disap
pointed. The shopkeeper didn’t
collapse. He was calm. As If such
a lavish purchasing were not at all
unusual to one who dealt In such
dainties. Joanna lost interest tn
his wares and in him. Suddenly
this little shop with the gaudy, hut
enticing window display, and the
rack* filled with billowy, sofl
! things tn every conceivable tin!
j and shade, became unpretty, unin
-1 Yttntg. She com parted her pur
i chases, though, and went oot to
her wafting cab.
I She remembered her first plc
■tc. Strange how her thought*
were slipping backward during
| these hours! That picnic! Be
| cause she bad been particularly
I food for a week her mother had
permitted her to go with the other
I girls, older girls, without a guard
ian to restrain her. And she wae
tn such a stew when the baskets
were spread out and the girls and
boys broke up Into parties and
hunted out the swings and wading
places around the little lake There
■*ss so much for her to do. so
much sheer Joy to garner In. that
•he ran »bout In circles unable to
jnake np her mltsd #here to begin,
ihe was like that day. hot it w»*
funny that she should remember.
And queer, too, that today she had
something of that same old, silly
feeling that had come to her dur
ing the picnic afternoon.
She had stopped for a rntnnta
that afternoon between racing
from one excitement to another to
eateh her breath Mwl to say to her
self with ihlldish eagerness that
■he was glad she's bean—good To
day when aha came out of the
Hngerie shop she was glad in a
way that she had. been —well, per
haps there were-jo; medals hang
, InVlshln" & and a 'fa”er
. were where she crtld go to th-m
j today. ThejFd give lots of room to
. Sfi‘B
• v' vv ?: ‘-ifr /
IN. - ' *
showed through and some
other things, but she could look
them straight in the eyes Just the
same. “Tt would be so splendid if
they, or one of them, could be here
now!
This climax to her reflection*
and her memories of the picnic oc
casion revived the glow la the
slim, eager body. There Wasn’t
anybody to share with her, except
John, so she decided to just let it
go at that. He’d help her, too, to
reason out something about the
thing that happened to her. Sh)l
by herself simply couldn't.
By late afternoon what, with
some hectic scrambling into and
out of her taxicab, she was ready
for her descent upon the silk coun
ter. She tried to forego that logical
detail of the day. but couldn’t.
Courageously she had slighted the
shops and stores where girls of the
counters and offices got thofr
copies of avenue modes. She bold
ly went onto the avenue Itself,
even Into the upper section, where
to be admitted as a patron is an
award of honor which, earned,
brings a marvelous deference and
where she was called "Mademoi
selle.'* The result felt upon the
“I don’t know why the moUey
was given me, nor by whom.
You must believe me John, and
help me.”
silk counter as a sudden breath of
some exquisite narcotic that
sweeps the senses into appalling
ecstacy.
Joanna had timed her visit clev
erly; she appeared during the lull
between the leisurely shoppers
who finish early and the last min
ute crush of the hurrying, belated
ones. Trailing behind a spacious
grande dame who was threading
her way through the atsles. she
suddenly stood at her old counter,
only on the other Stde of it, her
gray gloved fingers tapping sharp
ly on the polished wood, in obvious
imitation of the department buyer.
With her roguery dancing out of
her eyes at every face behind the
-eouater— the faces of her workday
friends—she purred sweetly:
"Good morning, young ladles!"
At that moment Joanna's voice was
the silver tinkle of ineffable Inner
harmonies.
Store patrons sitting at the
counter turned curiously to scan
the newcomer. In the attitudes of
the girls who served them they
sensed a drama.
It was Georgle. Joanna’* best
chum and also one of Mrs. Adams' •
flapper*, who was first to find her
tongue.
"Good Lord!" she . breathed.
“Look what the stork’s dropped!”
Then there was a rush. Joanna
without ceremony, oblivious to cus
tomers with bellows of vari-colored
silk in their hands, stepped back
into the aisle and swung arornd
for Inspection.
"Miss Twenty seven” had be
come thp slender wraith of a hot
lofcse flower, all perfuto*. softaass
and delicate oolor; beneath her
mink wrap she shone vaguely
grey- tailleiir that tell
srrafkht from underneath her
shoulders, but hugged her hips;
skirt that dropped into straight
lines without a touch of trimming
or vagrant pleats or colors: a
thing that was infinitely and ex
pensively "avenue;" grey shear
hoajs of a quality that echoed Info
the very souls of Georgie and the
rest! Slippers, slippers that were
wondrous things of some skin with
the sheen of grey velvet! A rav
Ishitig little hat. grey with a splash
of scarlet at the side. Georgia es
tlraated the very simplicities of
that hat as next door to being
priceless.
A single flower, but that •• or
chid. nestled at Joanna’* waist
There baa an Immediate baWi
of tolces. punctuated presently 6y
the sharp reminder of an Impatient
ctialomer that there were those
With wants to be attended to.
"So ybu weren-’t fired after an?"
Georgle exclaimed when she had
summoned her wits. "Here we've
been picking out the hymns for
sow funeral all day and you—
yok'f* pulled off whatever yoo'te
MM* off! Let the tidings ioo«e.
J 0! What's what—and who?"
Georple’s tone bad dropped to the
confidential lewil.
Joanna's ey«* 9aftfoS»fed Immedt,
cliß warned.
Georgle stared at her. “Well,
for. the love of—" The girl on the
other aide of the counter, oa the
t j
outside now, Interrupted sharply:
"Yes, that’s what I said. YouYs 1
plugging in the wrong line!”
She bad intended so let “Mr. i
Good Morning” (east his eyes also, i
but suddenly she lost the flavor of j
her play. She swung smartly
about and without as much as a
nod, leaving an endless volley of
questions completely unanswered,
she elbowed her way Into the
Street.
she had thought of going up tA
Mr. Gragdon see her and to ash
of him some more, wild questiona
but she forgot. '
Why did everyone, even Georgia,
whokout of. some very definite un
derstandings between them, should
know her pretty well—why d!0 alt ]
of them think things? What was \
wrong with the world, the whole i
world? Was there no one who
really knew about a girl? Not
even among other girls?
Something very profound was
stirring down below the surface of
the deep brown ayes of Joanna,
but it was still too abstract a con
fusion for her to grapple with. She
wa9 singing again when she reach
ed home. The world for some un>
fathomable reason had picked her
out to be good too.
When Georgle arrived, breath
less from her rush from the store,
Joanna was in the midst of her fa
verish unpacking of boxes. She
had forgotten her pique, and
Georgle had forgotten her offense
apparently. She plunged in to
help, vainly trying to get In ques
tions between her squeals of de
light over the procession, of sur
prising new things. Whatever per
tinent queries she had treasured
up against opportunity to voic«
them were effectually silenced
when Joanna remarked:
“Lay off tomorrow, Georgle Gel
sick or have a boil or something.
I'm going to take you to som« j
place 1 found today and buy you
some real things—whatever you
want. But you've got to wear youi
dresses looser, little daughter!
That black satin you affect Is all
right. 1 guess, but when you get
the real things that have somi !
bonest-to-goodness style In them
why you don’t need to wear them
So skimpy to look your best. It
you don't know what 1 mean stay
awake tonight and think it over,
Georgle. I'm giving yon something
straight!”
"So straight It sounds like a ser
mon to me.” the other girl retort/
ed. “And this isn’t Sunday, el
ther! But you've got a license al)
jlght, 1 suppose." It was a senten
tious finish, but Joanna preferred
not to take It up.
Joanna heard Mrs. Adam?
through half open doors tell othet
girls in the house that the drawing
room has been assigned for the
evening atM heard the flippant re
joinders that there were lots ot
other wide open spaces in the
world anyway. After awhile, after
she had resigned outright one of
her new gowns to. Georgle as an
installment of tomorrow’s promise,
?he thought she heard John come
in the front door. She listened
eagerly, lips hot. eyes shining and
body trembltng, bnt there was nd
call from Mrs Adams. She fell
again to examining herself in her
bit of mirror, twisting and squirm
ing to glimpse as much at one"
time as possible of her gorgeous!;
soft and glimmerinr evening gown
out of which her throat lifted
round and white. She’d always had
a frock without sleeves and a fair
ly low cut neck, but each of them
modest affkirs. had made her him
gry for something real—something '
that really would be a gown. At
last! Whatj the feel of that dress
was to Joanna hobort? bill Joanna
will ever kndw. She wouldn't ad
mit It herself, and it’s the sort ol
thing that can be painted on a can
vss or put Into music, but uevet
said In words
She heard the rattle of the door
bell. She signed to Georgle to be
quiet and opened her door an Inch
or two. She heard Mrs. Adams an
swerlng an Inquiry, aqd the voice
she heard thea was not John’s, bai
the quiet. modulated (ones of the
man she had met at the bank—
She heard Mrs. Adams' confrr
slon. "Why, yes, I’ll tell her you're
asking for her.” the puzzled land
lady was'' saying “But I don’t
know whether to put you in the
parlor to wait or not. There's
somaonts—her friend —is in there
»' r ® been talking to about
ner. Sne doesh’t know ne's here
yet”
And then Brandon's suave voice:
"I am sure we will get on fa
fnpusly. her—her friend and l
We'll talk about her. too, you sea
if she is'very long coming down
I have brought her some flowers
Will you be good enough to band
them to her?" .
Joanna he*r4 #*»' Adams herd-
Jfcg Mm Inta the "drawing room
bitty and In her diffident, blunder
ing way mumbling an Introduction
So John had come In. She was
right wbea ahe thought she heard
him. And ne and Mrs. Adams feed
been talking together ail tile tta«
iff. muffled whlspere so sbe would
not,, know—fklUtag or bier And
now Brandon, a man who sfi«
thought knew what was a secret
from her. had com*, as be bad
lightly threatened, and John would
see him. Brandon and John! Sfe*
wanted to keep John. She’d never
realised before how much. i
She didn’t know wby, but Joanna
was afraid as sh# went down
stairs: so soft and yeung aad bean
tlful in her costly new gewn, add
so flushed from the day’s events.
• but afraid.
i
>1 (To be continued)
IBELL-HARRIS FURNItDRE CAI!
I “A RESTFUL-SLEEP" I
fl When in your bedroom the furniture and floor cover- j
B ings all nwrge into a happy setting that spells a restful 5
jg “good-night”; where deep springs and buoyant mattress }
fi give assurance of.bodily ease. Each effect in the room !<
g gradually loses it’s distinctness the pictures become hazy, s
O and soon one is fast asleep—in a sleep that knows no
dreaming. \ N !*
[ pawn gray and heliotrope for “Sister’s” walnut S '
i for “Brother Bill’s”, and deep lustrous mahogany for 0
j! Mother and Dad’s Room—all here in wide selection.
i? Spring’is coming. Now is the time to look them over.
BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO.;
Stetson and No Name ]
HATS FOR SPRING
. We are showing a very tomplete §
j] line of Spring Hats, Stetson and No |
;]| Name Hats are well known for their 1
:]: Style and Everlasting quality. §!•
Watch Dur windows and come in I
| and let us f»t you with the HAT you jj
want. \ 8
<* 6
RICHMOND-FLOWE CO.
ocoooooooooooooooooooocsxxxxiooevxxxsoooboc^joDooooo^
Every Home Can
Have Frigidaire
At very low cost you can now
have Frigidaire installed com
plete with cabinet. For an even
smaller cost you can make your
present ice-box a Frigidaire. Ask
us for complete information.
STANDARD BUICK COMPANY
Display Room 47 So. Union St.
~ , Phone 876 or 363
( . ’
Mbw ftfrtaFnfi. roM v
' 1- B - RAIFORD, Salesman
r, Rp®
rr&i REFRIGERATION
oub pFnny ms. always get results
V-
Special This Week:
STATIONERY
Liberal Discount
on all Box Paper
500 Reeves Tour
Votes on Each Dol
lars Worth.
PEARL DRUG
CO.
| , x
j Phone* 22—722
Monday, March 1, 1926
Tttfc BATH S VOtfftfWtWß
ViWtH Torrid days--
?\WE OP YOUR- 7
p»ila ze
Don’t let your temper get
the best**? f you during this
weather or during the hot days
to come. See that your bath
room is fitted with the. proper
tub and plumbing and you can
Laugh at Old Sol. W«fre plumb
ers de luxe when it comes to
bath room fixtures.
CONCORD PLUMBING
COMPANY ' L
174 Kerr St. Phone 57« j