PAGE SIX { KOTOR TRUCKS to END NEW YORK FOOD ("RISK - I ' . S ? * ’ CHICAGO.— Heeding the popula- | t;or> of the great cities of the court-1 try is becoming a transportation I problem, it was declared-by C. 3.1 patchings, secretary of the Na- I ■Sic a! Transportation Institute, in i -ae address to a traffic conference i ►’d New York City’s five mil- I in. ■& of people have been on the I j®Ac e of a famine of fresh vegeta- i Wos -vjd other farm products this I fK&tnar because of 1 f—- 11 —————— c V .; . ' ifif now why fiHHHHpHfc HM*- SK it’s zooming —it’s the best w cigarette eVCr v ' ••■5. .• JP V’rgv ix - jdfeK- CJifk bfwl^^Rs : (aHrHkMirf / p I ' | T : nMffnri ifffMßiiiL.> laWft fvJhßh ~*Jr f : 11 m^SIL hi? trSIL i«TißMrpßr inffiwS -w ~ ** i I w ' H # s j j ’ ■ '(' , ,y &«*-jL.-.- fc ; the '.‘ i mjr.al delivery system. "Our great centers of congested copulation have grown far faster Un;r. the means of transportation,” said Mr. Hutchings. “It is obvi ously out of the Question to run in new railroad tracks and build J freight ‘.rations in a city like New ! York, which is already crowded to | the limit. An engineers commis sion recently investigated the! ; freight problem of St. Louis and j | reported that the cost of on track I | freight houses in the city would be | i >o huge as to be impossible to con- i j si dor. | “St. Louis solved the problem by ’ J a motor truck system privately de- i jvelopad to co-operate with the rail- J i roads. Eight off track freight j Ihou-sus are operated in the city. I i London, England, is using motv I trucks in co-operation with tee ; English railroads and many cit es jin this country are developing .motor truck auxiliary freight j handling systems. The New York Port Authority is trying to work out a plan of economical delivery jby motor ti tick to central food j depots. “Enormous centers -vs ponulat: or (are a new problem of this er ?. J They have not been planned for. | People packed in them in thousands jto a city block are entirely do j pendent on a daily supply of food from the country. Cities like Now j York or Chicago would be starving jin a week’s time if farm prodne 1 » were not poured into them daily in 1 train loads.” THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE MICH BUILDING IN GREENSBORO Total Cost of Construct km So Far This Year is fa. 506.610.70. Greensboro. Sept. 17.—The two-mil lion dollar mark having; been passed in the matter of building operations for Greater Greensboro, this city is now steadily forging towards the fit.ooo,ooo mark, for during the first two weeks of the current month of September the total cost of buildings authorised for construction by T. .1. HcAdoo. city building inspej-tior, nmounbhd to nn proximntely $2Ol The records of Inspector McAdoo presage that this will be a banner month iin building operations, as the total cost jof construction authorized thus far this 1 month is $15(1 more than ii was for the ; entire month of April, of this year, I When it amounted to $201.0X2. I The record this month brings tile j total cost of construction for the vear Ito $2.:50d.(!10.70. lacking only $1.517.- j r.tiX.Xn of e.inailing the total cost of! 'construction for the War, 1!)22. when it ■amounted’ to $4,123.170. However, dur j ing last year the permit for the Jeffer son Standard 17-ntory building, which was estimated to cost $2,000,000. was included, so it will be plainly seen that the normal building activities for 1021! are considerably in excess ofAvhat they were for the same period last year. Despite the numerous dwellings that are in course of construction, there is an acute shortage of dwellings in Greensboro, and it has been estimated that as many as seventeen person a „ week are diverted from Greensboro, be cause of the housing problem. Why Change? An exchange says that “every cynical bachelor ought to have his nose pulled by a dimpled baby,” hut the chances are that his mg is living pulled by a dimpled, painted doll of about nine teen. —Allentown Record. Can Make Flower Scents. Nearly rill flower scents can be suc cessfully imitated by judicious blend ing of artificial odors. That of the Jasmine is tire most notable excep tion. One Lie Breeds Another. He who tells a lie is not sensible how great a task he undertakes; for he must invent 20 more to maintain that one. —I’ope. IFthe isle of RETRIBUTION EDISON MARSHALL * illustrated R.W.SATTfRTICtO © LITTLE, BROWN ecOMPANy, |«*« the 1 place of the self-conceit that ♦*-* < brought him to disaster. But the 1 first real moment oi was MBHMUmHffyifIMMI IMIIUM—M Tuesday, September 18, 1923 also onq °f peril—on the trapping trail one clear afternoon toward the bitter cloee of January. He bad been quietly following portion of the trap line that followed the timber belt between the Twelve* Mile cabin and Forks cabin, and the blazed trail had led him Into the depths of a heavy thicket of young spruce. He had never felt more se cure.’ The only hint of danger **»* the Red Gods afforded him did not half penetrate his consciousness and did not in the least call him from his pleasimt fancies. It was only a _ glimpse of green where the enow had ' " been shaken from a compact little ’ group of sapling spruce Just beside I one of his sets. Likely the wind had caught the little trees Just right: • perhaps some unfortunate little fur -1 bearer, a marten perhape. or a fisher, ■ had sprung back and forth among the little trees In an effort to free himself from the trap. H e walked ; up quietly, located the tree to which the trap chain was attached, bent and started to draw the trap from the small, dense thicket whence 1 some creature had dragged it. He was only casually, interested in what manner of poor, frozen creature would be revealed between the steel jawa The beauty of the day had wholly taken bis mind from hia work. One moment, and the forest waa asleep about him; the little trees looked sadly burdened with their loads of snow. The next, and the man was hurled to the ground by a savage, snarling thing that leaped from the covert like the snow demon it was; and white, gleaming fangs were flashing toward his throat. XXII EXCEPT for the > impediment of the trap on the creature’s foot, there would have been but one blow to that battle In the snow. White fangs would have gone home, where they were aimed, and all of Ned Cornet’s problems would have' 1 been simply and promptly solved. This was not some little fur-bearer, helpless in the trap. It waa no less a creature than that great terror of the snow, a full-grown Arctic wolf, almost as white as the drifts he hunted through. Only the spruce trees knew how this fierce and cun ning hunter came to snare hia foot in the Jaws of a marten trap. Nor could any sensible explanation be made why the great wolf did not break the chain with one lunge of his powerful body. Instead of slink ing into the coverts and waiting de velopmenta The ways of the wild creatures quite often fall of any kind of an explanation; and It is a bold woodsman who will say what any t particular creature will do under any j particular condition. When he saw * Ned’s body within leaping range, he knew the desperate Impulse to fight. The chain of the trap broke like • spring as he leaped. The steel leash that is often used to restrain a savage ( dog would have broken no less quick ly. There waa no visible recoil? what little resistance there waa ■ seemingly did not in the least retard the blow. It dkl, however, affect its accuracy. That fact alone saved Ned from Instant death. But os the wolf lunged toward him to complete his work—after the manner of some of the beasts of prey when they fell to kill at the first leap —an Inner man of might seemed to J waken to Ned’s prone body. A great force came to life within him. He lunged upward and met the wolf in the teeth. A great surge of strength, seem ingly without physical limitation, poured through him. In one great bound he overcame the deadly handi cap of his own prone position, .«iringw tog up with terrible, reaching, snatching hands and clasping arms. Some way, he did not know how. he burled that hundred pounds of living , steel from his body before the white fangs could go home. ' But there was not an Instant’s pausa Desperate with fury, the wolf sprang in again—a long, white streak almost too test for the eye to follow. Bat ho did not find Ned at a disadvantage now. The man had wrenched to one aide to hurl the creature away, but he had already caught hia balance and had to meet the second nnJnufit (Continued hi tar Mask Imm | . ‘ TODAY'S EVENTS. Tuesday, Sept. 18, 1923, Chile today commemorates the anniver sary of its declaration of independence. Today is primary election day in Penn sylvania for the selection of municipal and connty officers. Primaries will be held in New York to day to choose several candidates for the State judiciary and a new Assembly. - The Supreme Council of the Thirty third Degree far the Northern Jurisdic tion Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite of the United States meets in New York to day for iti 111th annual session. Gasoline prices will be considered ami support probably given to investigations of the oil industry at a national confer ence on motor vehicle laws which has been called for Boston today. A uotable wedding in New York City today will be that of Miss Gloria Gould., daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. George J. Gould, and an” heiress to a large es tate, and Henry Alfred Bishop. Jr. . An "international middle class confer ence,” has been called to meet in Berne. Switzerland, today 'to organize u world federation to defend the Bourgeoisie against communistic or socialist attacks. ■pioS joj jußJdiinpn an sn ana pi!. )U3A3jd oi nes eqi ojui u.uojqi li pa.inp.io pun ‘naijaiuy mnog uuuj mauiinid jo jjodxa am apnqjoj atnji auo in juamujaAoS qsiundy aqj, , -ueaao o*u| umojiij. aouo umuimid •iiqaaAV uoiJnq uuajjauiv —,/ifnAn nano aajj aqi |jn aaj* oi paSnanuj »A,i jnq *}ai sauo aq; ; 0