Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Oct. 24, 1923, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE SIX / : } J. Big Cast Includes: / James Kirkwood M «- «> V / Bessie Love •v f'-..•wij.w a /nlCn u v 7 George Haekthorne Otw-; m a™; Mcnowen ' • i'W ■ 'V\ \ Robert McKim /V:** ' { +*§ ‘ :•. -£7 £ ‘"" v • ■&{%» \ \ Victory Bateman '■fJmW? A-J* \V Erie Mayne ■ \ .-v* ' Lucille Ricksen •4 jjjfek'' IT 'Sili-. 4 '.~sr and a host of others :^i im&k j ■ ■ »M ' ■'2381 rl^nf; 1 it’VV- *• „ • f #' II . . ’ f S Sensational Photodramatic Drug 1 aS Expose That Is Rocking America To : W- Its Foundation — pendous drama this gigantic mo- V tion picture plunges home a - «j|» mighty story of human life. In \ a voice of silence it thunders forth BmgPf \ a passionate outcry that makes Si \ the emotions tremble. Intower- I Wm 1 mg transcripts of tremendous I WP*: > ■'£ - j thrills it bums its way into the lily" \ V j consciousness, leaving a trail of Wf ! piercing memories that will linger / f \. It’s real! It lives! It vibrates brant, virile, triumphant! ■" X 'X |W It throbs'with human interest! - XW It flames with blazing emotions! ; It quivers with crashing power! It rushes with dramatic conflict! > ' r It w hirls with breathless action! Picture begins at 1,3, 5,7 and 9 o’clock. It whips with Cutting teeth! It * ■ crushes with overwhelming force! PIEDMONT THEATRE Today, Thursday and Friday Exploded Myth of “Tnspeakable Turk” Arthur Tremaine Chester int'urrent His tory Magazine. The Turks were not “anxious to fight" any more than we were in the Revolution ary or Civil War, but they were deter mined to throw off the domination of rival European powers or die trying to do so. ' I lived for nearly a year in An gora and I know the spirit that prevail ed there. Above everything ggcept nat ional freedom they wanted peace and national unity. They had no desire to enlarge Turkish territory at the expense of this principle. The charge that the Turks would have demanded the return qf Palestine. Syria and Mesopotamia, had it not meant war with England or France, scarcely deserves refutation. This .....J. .... ■ would not only have been entirely con trary to the National Pact, but frequent ly Turkish officials have volunteered she information to me that Turkey would hot accept non-Turkish .sections of their country as constituted in 1914 if offered them. These countries were always a source of discord, endangering the unity of the country, and were a heavy drain on the treasury instead of being a finan cial asset. As to the aliens already es tablished on Turkish soil, new Turkey has resolutely decided to end once and for ever the intolerable situation created by the plotting* of the so-called “Christian minorities" against the Government, arid to silence the century-long campaign of propaganda and hatred directed against the Turks on the": ground of atrocious • massacre. The legend of die “unspeaka ble lurk' must go. Mrs. Suzuki, a daughter of Japan, who is probably the foremost business woman of the entire worl<l, haw an income in ex cess of $50,000 a day, yet she is content to live as modestly as when, a score of years ago, she helped to do her own housework in the intervals of managing the small sugar refinery which she had inherited from her husband. Today the net of her enterprises covers the whole civilized world, from Melbourne to the Yukon and from Calcutta to New York. Her ships, factories and mines she counts in thousands, nnd .sbe holds in her tiny hands the threads of noe of the vast est and most complex businesses on earth'., THE CONCORD DAILY fßlfetJNfc Another War in Europe Forecast. Geneva. Oct. 22.—The “blood of the Burgundians” has appeared again on the water of • I.ake Morat, near Xeuchatel, portending more trouble for old Europe! if ancient legend is to be believed. The reddening of the water of this lake is caused by the flowering of an aquatic plant, which, however, blooms very rare ly. The phenomenon was seen ! n 1476, when 36,000 Burgundians under Charles the Bold were defeated near the lake by the Swiss. The last time the water were red was in 1914, just before the outbreak of the World War, a circum stance said to justify the old saying, “When blood is soon on Lake siorat there will be bloodshed in Europe.” Thirty Prisoner* Escape From Jail. Kinston, Oct. 21.—Thirteen negro prisoners escaped from the Lenoir county jail this evening just before dark. None of them bad been apprehended at ten o clock tonight. Bloodhounds lost the trail in the main thoroughfare of the city. fctevernl were under chain gang sentences and were to have been taken the roads Monday. Escape was made by picking a hole through a brick wall and using blankets to let the prisoners down from the sec- 1 ond floor. Other prisoners, including several white men, did not know of the escape which wa« # made from the main corridor in the colored section of the '»“• i -Hoch! - I Von tOndsnburc. ?or~irr hr:nl W ;b» German armtaa, now atMndS I man? days la hooting. line !>•: i-i fullv .quipped uu] rend?’to- 9 boot | ins expaditioo In thn mountains ot Bivani if* bin «ary totaas pi.c-io Teddy’s Cradle ♦ J . K JH This shows the very bed . . hcodore Roosevelt slept when a baby. It has been placed With l*. * iitmsovelt Museum, 28 East 20th •treaty Kfew York. t The. museum is to lv formally cupped Oct. 27, “Sheridan 20 Miles Away" Sixtieth anniversary of the battle of Cedar Creek will bo held next jrear when “Sheridan’s Ride” will live again In Virginia. Os the 50,000 soldiers taking part In the battle saved fr.om a Union rout by the great ride, several thousand still live. Photo shows White Oaks, Sheridan's headquarters at Cedar Creek. A Newspaper of 192 Pages. The New York Times printed Suny day, October 7. the largest edition in-its history—probably the largest regular ed ition ever published by any Nw York newspaper. It consisted of twelve sec tions, comprising a total of 192 pages (}76 full-sized newspaper pages), The total weight of paper in the edition of 585,000 copies was 877 tons, or 1,754,000 pounds. There were 545 columns of news, special features and pictures, and 883 colupms of advertising—tbe largest volume of spontaneous advertisements ever printed in n single day in a regular editiou of a New York newspaper. A Power Tier VVantts to Know—. Charlotte Observer. A cotton mill man of Gastonia and a large user of the Southern Power Com pany's current, called up the Observer fSfckl •.V'/n.r! i\ .J. -W'ii-V » i -/ Wednesday, October 24, 1923 yesterday, asking to be allowed to put in one question at long distance. He wants to know this: "Why is Josephus Daniels fighting increases in rates, when investigation reveals the fact that since 1917 Mr. Daniels has raised advertising rates in his paper approximately 60 per cent, and his subscription rates nearly $3.50?" What he wants to know of The News and Observer is if it “would be willing to lower rates to those prevailing in 1917?” A mill man is asking Tbe Observer to submit this request for in formation,and it is for our Raleigh con temporary to oblige him, if it desires to do so. Os course. The News and Obser ver could hnvo bis name, if it should want to have conversation with him. Wichita, Kas., is the largest broom corn qigrket in the world,
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Oct. 24, 1923, edition 1
6
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