Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Oct. 10, 1923, edition 1 / Page 39
Part of The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Studebaker Year —•- -—g STUDEBAKER HAS GONE FAR BEYOND CURRENT PRACTICE TO MAKE THESE CARS THE MOTORING FEATURE OF THE YEAR. THEY EMBODY EVERY IMPORTANT IMPROVEMENT KNOWN TO I Meet -us at the Fair and hear the 'TBwT Talking Studebaker TIRFS ACCESSORIES REPAIR SERVICE r . T , , * Good Tires are the foundation of motor- We have many conveniences which will When your car leaver our garage, you can depend on ihe work you j." g C 0)^ O / t Y J ° Ul ' frOm fife tTOU add greatly to the pleasure of driving in stock ordered done, being a » thoroughly executed a8 it t. possible for first ° les Wlll de P end on first having good tires and which can be installed at a small cost in class materials and experienced workmen to accomplish, our labor (such as we sell) and then looking after them a few minutes. A spot light, for example with’ Saving equipment reduces the working time, and enables us to make a properly. Let us take your tire troubles off extension cord, is real handy on a dark night very reasonable charge for reliable work._ Repairs are made to any your hands by inspecting your tires from time when anything about the car needs attention. TZ temfonsTheyW 8 “ f ° 5-Paj«nger Coupe $2550 “Always Ready To Serve You” 1924 Modal ILL-—B || H-r- J ~ Auto Supply And Repair Co. 19X4 Models Are the Finest rox,mun M ■ I- Big-Sixes Studebaker Ever Built CONCORD, N. C HISTORY OF STONEWALL TRAINING SCHOOL (Continued from I’age Thirty-eight.) sible by n donation of Mr. and Mrs. \V. N. Renoynolds. of Winston-Salem. It bouses considerable work stock, much of the products of the farm, the farm ma chinery ; and in one section is establish ed, for the want of a better one, the dairy outfit nnd stock. This tem|M>rar.v quar ters for the dairy barn has never been satisfactory and is inadequate for the growing heard of Holsteius and Jerseys, which have been developed on the farm. 5. The chapel, built of Itowan gran ite, is the pride of the institution. Funds for its building were furnished by the state organization of the King's Daugh ters and Sous. The interior is splendid ly furnished. The pews are handAome. (be electric lighting modern, and the organ donated by trie Stonewall Circle, of Concord, is a North Carolina product. Plans are making whereby the King’s Daughters will substitute memorial stained windows to take the place of the plain ones in the Chapel. The Junior cirele, of Concord, having already install ed one. This chapel could not be dupli cated for twenty-five thousand dollars to day, and yet it never cost the state or the school one single cent—it is the expression of the love nnd service of godly women throughout the state. 0. The main well from which the in stitution gets its water supply is more than 1)00 feet deep, drilled through solid rock from within five feet of the surface. A splendid pumping outfit lifts the water into a large steel tank more than 100 feet high. A challenge has been issued, and is now renewed: "handsome reward for the (Recovery of one germ in the wa ter supply that should uot be there.’’ 7. A brick conservatory that proved unsatisfactory aud unfitted for the pur pose Intended, has been converted into ti modern sweet potato drying house. More than 700 bushels of potatoes are stored in it, and it is in its third successful use. 8. The largest of the whole plent is the school building, whose erection wag deferred until sufficient funds were avail able to .erect that which would not only meet present but future necessities for < * h ' v ’_ ►' * a ' It - - fin This Barn at the Jackson Training School Holda Fifty Head of Stock f * MAKING HUSKY MEN t. . ’ ■i • s Scene Showing Setting up Exercises at the Jackson Training School many years to eome. What cost the school fifty thousand dollars could not be duplicated today, ns prominent build ers say. for less than one hundred thou sand dollars. This is believable, for in its erection the school furnished much labor, did hauling, grading ami other ser vices that would have readied into the thousands had it been employed. By this method, expense was saved ; and, iu the employment of our own folks, it served to reveal the boys ns well as to us. fpr the first time, just what their treud it. This is vital. Muny a failure has occur red in well organized society from an attempt to do that for which there is lacking in the individual a natural trend. Resides modern school rooms, properly lighted, there are many other rooms ami space much needed in the conduct of the institution. In the reur. uot showing in the picture in this Issue, there is a large two story wing, in which is a modern auditorium of considerable capacity, and under thin a gymnasium room. There is apace for a swimming pool aud other equipment. DAIRY BARN THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE-FAIR AND INDUSTRIAL EDITION THE ADVERTISING IN THIS EDITION Written and Designed 1 R. B. Mahaffev James Cruikshank Lafayette B. Deason Southern Publicity Co. Wilmington, North Carolina i). A sewerage system with proper sep tic tanks has been installed and serves every building on the campus. 10. A side track, connecting with the Southern railroad, is now building. lit the ,matter’ of drayage and conven ience, especially since considerable con struction work is going on, there will be lan immense saving of expeuse aud time. I 11. Eight and power are secured from I the Southern Power Company over a | line .constructed by the institution, which I connects with,' the distributing station at Concord, three miles distant. The in stallation of this electric connection has proved a large saving and much in con venience. thus dispensing with the use of oil for lights und gas engines for power. The value of the personal property which has been accumulated by purchase, by increase and by donation, is immense 1 for an institution of u few years’ exist ence. But it is primarily a testimonial to wise management by toe officers nnd .to the generosity and liberality of friends in the State. 1 We plead guilty of entertaining very strong Teasons for believiug that the reader, forming a mental picture of the plant from the foregoing enumeration and description, will consider this a very satisfactory growth aud development in a short period of thirteen years. And when thy reader recalls that this devel opment, involving a ptonounced innova tion in the school • activities of North Carolina, and all the while it being pee essary to contest every inch in going for ward, he will regard the achievement lit tle short of marvelous. THE OBJECT OF ALL THIS ENDEA VOR. This far in this story the writer lias been dealing with lands, and material, in animate things. Os these there have been numerous inquiries by interested friends. The foregoipg exhibit, we take it, is complete enough to convince the reader that behind all this was a speci fic design to reach a specific point iu the accomplishment of a specific work in the We have come to the consideration of that phase which concerns the one real, outstanding reason for any and all hu mnu activity—the preservation and con servation of life, human life—that life that has its dwelling-place in an image of God—an honor and a glory vouchsafed to no other creature or thing of the uni verse. Such a thing must challenge the very highest and best service of society and man. The promoters of this institution, nod who have labored in its growth anti ser vice, have been brought face to face to the eouclusion that the welfare of child hood has too long been given the second place in the consideration of the authori ties. The conclusion seems unmistakable that all measures of success are the measures of the dollar and wealth. In this mud struggle for material wealth, which has stung most of our people, the standard, thoughts of former days in the welfare of childhood, its protection and DONT FAIL 1 1 to see the Wonderful display of | STAR and DURANT -1 AUTOMOBILES in the Big Tent Near the Grand Stand “FAIR WEEK” ... . ( = J. C. Blumes Garage I Spring St. Concord, N. C. I PAGE THIRTY-NINE moral safety, ami the practices regarded sound and worthwhile, have been discard ed or ignored. We have come to think too much in the saving influences of th« dollar rather than the character of that life which is unshakable and eternal. Too many believe that wealth secures position in society—they forget that society ends at best, just a few years hence. In this mad rush, small boys, becom ing a law unto themselves, underprivi leged and overprivileged, wiser than fath ers, in a measure unrestrained and for gotten, find themselves mixed up with the law. Their number is frightfully in creasing. It is a condition that chal lenges our most serious concern. From (Continued on Page Forty)
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 10, 1923, edition 1
39
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75