Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / May 16, 1923, edition 1 / Page 5
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,*">\ ■ ' ‘ * •Wednesday, May "16, 1923. ( It’s Great x © to be thirsty— whenyou Know the answer A pure beverage—bottled in our absolutely sanitary //fvljß plant where every bottle is f sterilized. Served ice-cold at stores, \ refreshment stands, restau- «' rants and hotels. jfWlftV Buy it by the ease from your grocer ancfkeep a few bottles \aMglipi on ice at home. wK&mST' > ■ Drink Delicious and Refreshing . bribe M< CAROLINA BOTTLING Co \ CONCORD, N. C. _ / 80 he chewed for a while, * TiT/'y Then he said with a smile; “I’ve got some consider / able job.” Y OU ca ri cLew and chew and chew. And still the flavor lasts. You’ll be surprised that so deli cate a flavor can last so long; y j Made for you by FLEER. Philadelphia Ki Royal Cords Rank First IJnited States Tires © are Good "Ores ' ANNOUNCEMENT—There ma /, shortage of Royal Cord Clincher Tires hjt/v/ year. Production it doubled this year. Demand more * > ■ than • justifies rr£t'm this increased production. * Whenever you have a chance to ibc®SXv/^ buy a Clincher sffm/ Royal —take it. I fin ml. Where to buyUSTins^^* .'.V ' 9 RITCHIE HARDWARE CO.; Concord, N. C. R. M. HdUSEL, Kannapolis, N. C. ’ HOME MISSIONS WITH SOUTHERN PRESBYTERIANS Hie Committee Is Now Greatly in Need of Funds. The caU to members of the South ern Presbyterian church in the Synod iof North Carolina for ’the cause of home missions (luring the year begin nirife April 1, is $78,000 for synod's home missions and $07,000 for pres bytery's home missions; the first of these figures Is 10'per cent, of the en tire budget. The home mission com mittee of the synod and of the presbv teries are greatly in Heed of funds for their work and are handicapped In the work because of lack of hinds with Which to meet the pressing needs de volving upon them. In order to con tinue their work, the home mission committees of several presbyteries have been forced into heavv debt be cause of the fact that the churches are not contributing their apportion ments for presbytery's home missions. In the Synod of North Carolina the home mission field is white unto har vest-, and with a sufficient number of workers and sufficient money to meet the needs of the work tWre 1 would lie ri great ingathering of souls during the Coming year in this synod. The fol lowing instances illustrate the crying of this work: Only recently, a white map 87 years of age was found ip Edgecombe county who never had heard the name of Jesus. Christ until he was told (he gospel story liv the minister who found him and who led him to Christ. One Presbyterian min ister alone has estaWished recently five Presbyterian churches in the northern part of Johnson county, thus changing the entire condition of a large part of the county. Some home fidission pastors have the care of five or six churches iiecau.se the home mis sion committees have not money to provide for the support of u suffi cient niuulk*r of missionaries. There is a great need ulso for church build ings for congregations now worship ping in school houses, and a need nlso for a manse for many pastors. The total budget for synod's and presbytery’s home missions for the coming year amounts to only $175,000, which is hut a small sum when com pared with the mere tithe of the in come of North Carolina Presbyterians which is H<rt less than $1.100,(W0 each year. . The fact that the 0.1,870 Pres byterians in this synod have a total Income each year of not less than $41.- 000,000 is sufficient to insure that they will not allow the call of the home missionaries for financial support to go unheeded, especially when (heir great Work stands for Christian educa tion and evangelization. r. TODAY’S EVENTS. v \ * Wednesday, May 16. 1923. Sixtieth anniversary ofthe battle of Champion Hills, between the Federate under Grant and the Confederates Pemberton. U Sacramento. Calif., votes on a pro posed bond issue of $2,000,000 for an Auditorium ants other municipal im provements. TLe Southern Baptist Convention, the largest “delegated religious body in the world, meets at Kansas City today Tor "its annual 'session. Between 700 and 800 of the leading cotton mill executives of the United States are .expected at (Richmond, Va.. today for the 27th annual convention of the American Cotton Manufactur ers’ Association. , Five thousand delegates from pub lie and private social welfare agencies throughout the United States and Canada are expected at the semi centennial convention celebra tion of the National Conference ‘of Social Work, opening today m Wash ington, D. C. The proposed regrohnd of the great railway systems east f -the (Miss issippi river and north of the Ohio and Potomac rivers is to he the sub ject of i. series of hearings scheduled to begin today before the Interstate Commerce Commission In Washing ton. p ’■v - f Tobacco Facte. Tooaflkj production and sales for North Carolina during the past year season amounted to 22l>,OOQyo© pounds, as reported by auction ware houses, aml 0:7.000,000 pounds deliver ies, filed by the co-operative associa tions. Approximately 10,000,000 pounds of North Carolina tobacco sold outside the State tn excess of that imported. The total farmers: toiiac eo produced, according to these figures, was about 270,000 pounds. The aver age prit-e received was $27.50 per hun dred or 17 per cent, higher than the 1021 average. v Wilson led the State with 42,350,161 pounds with Winston- Salem second with 32,030,445 pounds. There were 80 auction warehouses operated last year, compared with 205 the previous season. The co-operative associations operated about 120 re ceiving warehouses, hr else had them teased. *»_?! H V P ■» „ nil I , CATARRH Catarrh Is a Local dlscaso greatly in* •sawcffiptassnru list® Os an Ointment which gives Quick Relief by local application', and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts through the Blood on the' MUcoub Sur- ih ridding fyetem ■ a,,,. .■ ■b'diii Should immediately start taking DR UVINGSTOM 3 ° mssue Builder that replaces. I fJftVmArk -m n'alL-Ln SSW vunirmm- A dollar a bottle at drugstores THE CONCORD ECOtY TRIBUNE Divorce a Cancer in the Vitals of American Life! Needing the Knife' • "l - - By JOSEPH MORSCEtLUSER, New York Suprems Court. j 1 BELIEVE abolition of divorce should be brought about by con? gressional legislation and constitutional amendment. But that is a long way ahead because there are unfortunately so many middle-aged: and elderly men—and some young ones—who for one reason or other! want no wives. / \ I But one great practical steji that sEould be taken immediately is passage of legislation making decrees obtained in Ppris or elsewhera invalid. It is all wrong to let a rich man or woman run off to Paris to get a divorce. We should not allow a condition to exist, which per mits wealthy Americans to flee from-the operation of American laws. I believe in the single standard of morals, that a man guilty of immorality should receive the same condemnation from the law and from soeiety as a woman. Divorce is a cancer in'the vitals of American life sorely needing the knife. From my experience on the bench I know that half way reforms are ineffective. The only way to core the evil of divorce is to completely abolish divorce. \ The assertion that the abolition of divorce would promote immorality is all nonsense.. It would have no such effect. Its tendency in : every way would be to protect the home. There ÜBed to be as much immorality as there is today. Only you did not hear so much about it. The newspapers did not print so much about it. I favor this sort of thing. I would have •very divorce case tried in the open. This publicity has had much to do with the disgust which is widely felt towards divorce today. , Only People in the World Who Amount to 'Anything Are Those Who Work - By CHIEF JUSTICE F. E. THOMPSON, Illinois Supreme Court. With ■ the other fads of the moralists and / other intolerant bigots 6pmes the delusion that work is an affliction. This spirit has permeated all of us to a degree. One is sure to bring tears to the eyes of one’s lis teners when describing the poor workman who has to slave and sweat all day in the shop or in the field and then goes home at night and has nothing to eat but food and nothing to wear but clothes. The truth of the matter is that the only happy people in the world are those that get up in the morning and go to work. The people who never work are mostly the seekers for trouble and the finders thereof. The reason all the people on the earth do not go mad and tear each other to pieces is that they have to work for a living. The only people in this world who amount to anything are those who work. There are only a few people in this world who do not work. They are the parasites op the human race, the boils on the neck of the body politic. They are the lounge lizards and the parlor bolsheviki at one end of the garbage heap of life and the vagabonds at the other. a The Wisconsin Idea of Good Roads Has Always Been toJ“Serve Traffic” ' By J. T. DONAGHEY, Wisconsin jSighway Commission, The “Wisconsin' idea”—from the veTy beginning ha* been to “serve traffic. ’ The patrol maintenance plan, adopted in 1918, improved upon from year to year, and extended to include additional county highway* each year, has certainly “served traffic” better and satisfied the public to a greater degreo than the expenditure of the same amount of money eaefi year in constructing a few miles of high type surfacing woiild have done. . After five years of patrol maintenance we find that the following con ditions prevail: Every town, city or village in the state is on a well maintained and marked highway. Traffic is distributed over a large mile age, reducing congestion on many highways. The average speed of traffic has been increased at least ten mile* per hour, resulting in time saving beyond computation. It is difficult to estimate the total amount spent in Wisconsin by tour ists. From the most accurate data available we are confident that it now exceeds $100,000,000 annually. The air-tight sifter top keeps mS JB Zjy Jgj th® lye full - strength and n'S always ready for instant use. StTOMlr awMBBBb Jjl ■fniffffi I Red Devil Lye convenient to use ■ There’s no inconvenience about using Red Devil I Ljye. It is put up in granulated form, the mod ■ ~crn way to make lye. The can has, an air-tight sifter ■ top, which is opened quickly and closed easily. The ■ tight-fitting cap keeps the contents fresh dry ffl Red Devil Uye. being granulated, is no danger of using too much, ■j dissolves almost ins ta ntlg in hot Don’t be put off with out-of-date, ■ or cold water. It is ooonomical to unknown and wasteful' brands. Sa use became you can vaeasure just Insist upon genuine Red Devil H the quantity you and there —the lye that’s easy to use, | Write for Free Booklet r | Wm. Schield Mfg. Co, St- Louis® Mow YOU OWE IT TO YOUR CHILDREN - TO YOUR FAMILY TO SEE THAT THEY GET THE MOST NUTRITIOUS WHOLE SOME BAKINGS. • 1 * Don’t take the chance of sac rificing quality, economy and food value by using self-rising flour mixtures. They are only substitutes for good plain flour and good baking powder. The best baking results are ob tained from good hairing pow defr and plain flour. The results are far better than from self-rising flour. There is no substitute for good baking powder and plain flour. Economy does not necessarily mean cheapness of price* nor does it mean the easiest way. In these times the greatest care should be used in determining between true economy and the sham of mere cheapness be cause there are so many preparations and substitutes in the way of leaven ing agents on the market. For best results use—,/ Calumet Baking Powder and a good plain flour. ft's a long trail a ' From the North Pole to the South Pole, but Royal Pah in g Powder went with Ad miral Peary—Amundsen has it withhim now. It went with Scott to the South Pole. Stanley had it in darkest Africa. Royal is the only baking powder you can buy anywhere under the sun. ROYAL Bafisimg IWder A fade from Cream of Tartar derived from grapes Contains No Alum—Leaves No Bitter Taste PARK AVENUE HOTEL, 4th Atmhm, from 3244 to 33rd Streets, Now York (Subway Eatrukc. at Pwr) QNE of the best known hotel* in tho metropolis. Convenient to shopping, theatre*, and in ibe heart of tho wholesale district. Less than 50c. taxi fare (one or more persons) from either railway terminal. Surface car* pats door. PRICES FOR ROOMS • 50 single rooms $225 per day 100 tingle room* $250 nor day 250 double room* .... $4.00 per day and upward Single room* with bath . . $4.00 par day and upward Double room* with bath . - $5.00 per day and upward POPULAR PRICE CAFETERIA AND REGULAR RESTAURANT The SUNKEN PALM GARDEN i* surrounded by Dining Balconies and a fine Orchasta it stationed here erer/evm^ GEORGE C. BROWN, Proprietor - - - - _ _ _ , USE THE TIMES AND TRIBUNE PENNY COLUM PAGE FIVE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 16, 1923, edition 1
5
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