PAGE SIX
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mM.—Me
ANNUAL PEACH SHOW
WILL BE BIG EVENT
Two Governors Expected to Attend
Show of Peaches. Large Dewberry
Shipments.
Hamlet, June 22.—With acceptance
by Governor Morrison of the invitation
to open the fourth annual Carolina*
Sandhills peach show here on July 24
the entertainment program is taking
shape. Invitations have been extended
to Governor McLeod, of South Caro
lina. and to other prominent citizens of
the two states. Other plans in con
nection with the show are rapidly tak
ing shape. It -is expected to have Gov
ernor for the first day and Governor Mc-
Leod for the second. Their addresses
will probably be delivered from a plat
form erected just outside the exhibi
tion building, while most of the educa
tional and purely technical talks will
be given in the new city hall just open
ed.
Something entirely new' in^the man-1
ner of displaying the peaches this year
i« promised by the management. The
Huge pyramid last year attracted much
favorable' comment, but an arrangement
even more attractive is being worked
out for this year. The new arrangement
will largely eliminate the congestion in
the show room.
A few peaches are being placed on
the market now from family orchards in
this section, and those early varieties,
never considered of very good flavor as
compared with later crops, are said to
be unusually fine this year. Weather
conditions have beeen almost ideal and
1 then COOK with the Gas Turned Off i
j b With the gas on but 25 minutes, can you go cwsy for the H
g afternoon and return to find a perfectly cooked meal? H
B 7cm could If you cooked a* baked in the spedailytMuUted §1
aomc women in thU city do— Chamber* Oven and Aose you H
H «* C3iai«ibeta Rrelcaa Gas boiled or ttewnd under the B
B .Ran*#, j, Thenaodome, yoo wouldburn V • »
B t Yon woold not only free yoox gu only a few minute*, then B
. IB boom for many thing* youhrve turn it o(L
! xT”!* 1 *? !° Ur ®**d n *<i mould finUh the I
I *** *"?.!!**."* ° Mk * cooking and on returning you 1
-ore delkkm, by keeping th. could count you, «Nn. toecon, |
H 7™!“* «wde* of gm, daw, effort, food
B rot the dkhea you roeated or and flavor.
I Easy Time-Payments JrZSZrm B
canbersi!X»_r
wUktkt GAS TXlWlEDOrrl^^jS®^
Concord & Knnnnnofis Gas flnmnanv
• Or 0
B Y TAYLOR
( The VERM IDEA- TRMIN6 To CHARGE 1
me gi*tm dollars for two photos i
x can get pictures in anm photograph
gallerm for fifteen dollars a , <
DOZEN SO DON'T HOPE TO GET >
more than three (t—i
. ' D ° LU Me ‘* *
—\ a wai.tiv mi v»,w.tws.J 1
barring a disastrous wind or hail
storm over the peach belt within the
next few weks the Carolines sandhills
will move several steps higher in peach
production this year.
Eighty-nine cars of dewberries were
shipped a week ago. 170 last week, and
it is expected that at least another
hundred will go forward within the next
10 days. Figures on cantaloupe and
watermelon production are not obtain
able, but conditions of the crop on the
more than 1,500 acres of cantaloupes
and several hundred acres of water
melons, indicate record breaking pro
duction.
To Discuss Problems of the State.
Greensboro. June 23.—Commercial
organization secretaries from more than
fifty North Carolina cities meet at
Morehead City for a two-day discus
sion of North Carolina business and
problems, Friday and Saturday, June
27-2 S. Addresses by a do*en prominent
j North Carolinas and American men of
Chamber of Commerce men and the
meeting in to be one of the best ever
held in the annuals of the professional
association, according to advices of of
ficers of the body*.
Men leading the program, just an
nounced by Harry E. Barlow of New
Bern, chairman, include: Hugh Mcßae,
Wilmington; F. D. Courtney and Char
les M. Ketchum, Greensboro; Kenneth
Royall, Goldsboro; Brent 8. Drnne of
the N. C- Geologic and Economic Sur
vey ; Fred M. Allen. Gastonia; William
T- Ritter Winston-Salem: G. W.
Dailey, Wilson; Ernest N. Smith, geu
; eral manager of the American Auty
• mobile Association and others.
Secretaries from every section of
North Carolina will be in attendence
and among those signifying their in
■ tentions of being present are. Harry
; Barlow. New Bern; Louis Moore, seere
■ tary of the association, Wilmington;
Wilmington; M. R. Beamon. Wilson;
i Willard Kyzer, Kinston: L. S. Moody.
Salisbury; R. M. Horsburgh, Fnyettc
■ ville; J. War Maun, president of the
i association, Southern Pines and Greens
• boro; Norman Y. Chambliss. Rocky
Mount; Walter C. Denmark, Goldsboro;
N. G. Bartlette. secretary Eastern Caro
lina Chamber of Commerce; H. R.
Branch. Raleigh; Burke Hozgood, secre
tary of the Southern Secretaries Asso
: ciation, Durham; H. S. Fox, Laurin
burg; H. A. McNeel.v. Sanford; P. (.1.
Moore, Burlington; William T. Ritter,
Winston-Salem and A. M. McWhirter.
: Hendersonville-
Youngstown,' (WiiiV, has njbled »ts
■ public library to the Public Stiuare. It
' was a . move of only four blocks but the
theory is that the nearer the books, the
more people will use themm; besides,
the “per-eulation” cost of operating the
library soars and its social usefulness
goes down.
In.less than a year from the time in
sulin came into use for combntiug diu
r betes a prominent life insurance com
pany is able to report a small, but
probably significant, decline of 6.4 per
cent in the death rate fom that disease
among its industrial policy holders.
THE CONCORD DAILY, TRIBUNE
GATE CRASHERS WILL
BE CLOSELY WATCHED
They Are Going to Find it Hard to
Get to Deaaorratir Convention.
(By the Amorlated Press.)
New York. June 22—Madison Square
Garden will be so tightly guarded
against gate-crashers during the Nation
al Democratic convention that a burglar
will not be able to jimmy his way in.
As a first precaution, George F. Mara,
convention director, has had the tickets
pepared with stub detachable for each
session, and has kept the name of the
pinter nnd of the final distribution point
a secret, known only to himself. The
tickets will be passed out the day before
the convention opens.
Each of the nine public entrances to
the Garden, ns well as the numerous
secret passageways for committeemen,
newspaper men, convention officials,
house employes and police, will be
heavily guarded by uniformed officers
and police detectives. “Spotters,”
veteran party workers who know by
sight, most of the 12.2002 ticketholders.
will help the authorities detect im
posters.
An identification system has been de
vised by Stanley J. Quinn of the local
citizens’ 'non-partisan convention com
mittee ns insurance that the 2.500
tickets for New Yorkers who have con
tributed SIOO or more each to the en
tertainment fund will not fall into
scalpers’ 'hands. To each of his pros
pective ticket-holders. Mr. Quinn will
forward a receipt, in the form of a cer
tified bank check, to be signed and re
tained by the recipient. An identifica
tion card, to be signed and ret urn cl to
Mr. Quinn, will accompany the check.
On the day the convention opens the
New Yorkers will present their certi
fiieates at a place wlibsc location will he
kept secret until then. Signatures will
be compared and. if satisfactory, tickets
will be issued. Only a forger could beat
this system, and he would have to be
well disguised, too, for most of the con
tributors to the convention fund are men
nnd women prominent in local Demo
cratic or Republican circles.
According to Mr- Mara, the detach
able session-stub tickets will abolish a
form of gate crashing thnt. has been
common at previous national eonven
vions. It will be impossible, he said, for
a bona-fide ticket holder to gain his
seat in the auditorium and then dis
pateh liis ticket by messenger to a
friend, or customer, without the gates.
And ns final precaution. the 100
hawkers to be employes by concession
men will be barred from the main audi
torium and confined strictly to the
restauants and dub rooms with which
the vast arena will be encircled. Mr.
Mara recalled that a concessionaire was
arrested at the Sail Francisco session
when it was discovered he wad collect
ing his hawkers' admission pasteboards
and sending them outside to be scalped
to highest bidders.
Madison Square Garden employes,
who number 100 or more, will be obliged
to stand muster before each convention
session. It is intended thnt there shall
be no visiting of the proceedings by
proxy this year.
Newspaper Folks to Be Hosts to Fellow
Craftsmen.
New York. June- 21.—New York news
paper men and women will play hosts
to fellow craftsmen from all over the
land at the Democratic national conven
tion.
Entertainment of the visitors has been
undertaken, by authority of the Nat
ional Democratic and Local Citizens'
Committees, by the New York Newspaper
Club and the Newspaper Women’s Club,
wthich organizations; with a combined
membership of 1,200, have designated
Charles G. Hambridge. chief of all un
official press arrangements for the 1,000
or mdre correspondents wtyb will be
there.
Mr. Hambridge has made his plans
with the view first, of “providing for the
working comfort and convenience of the
visiting writers,” and second, in order
that all work and no play may not dull
the reporters’ wit, “of furnishing enter
tainment and recraation for them. For,”
says Mr. Hambridge, “political writers
attend a convention primarily .to work,
and the matter ot entertainment is sec-1
ondary to them.”
A fully equipped general workroom and
clearing house for all “lone dog” report
ers who will not have /access to the press
and syndicate accommodations will be
established in the basement of Madison
Square Garden, inf the convention news
dispatching center. A hurry-up lunch
service will be maintained, without
charge; attendants will supply the clear
ing house with all records of convention
proceedings, provide messenger service,
and act as a bureau of information.
There will be xqcb crowds about the
Garden and on streets to the principal
hotels thnt Commissioner Enright has
agreed to supply the visitors with guest
police cards, which, will let them through
all police lines and expedite their taxi
cabs through restricted traffic lines.
Vest pocket boclete crammed with vi
tal information about the convention per
sonnel, delegations’ headquarters, rapid
services of communication, traffic short
cuts between strategic points, etc., have
been prepared especially for the visitors.
Besides the customary press badges and
credentials, two sets of lapel buttons
will be one for local scribes
and one for visitors, for purposes of
quick, mutual identification.
Each member of the local craft will be
expected to place himself or herself at
the disposhl of any visitor, either in
facilitating the gathering of news or the
search for entertainment. The out-of
towners also will share in all privileges
and courtesies to be extended convention
delegates and alternates, in addition to
the numerous special in and outdoor di
versions being arranged for them. They
will receive press tickets giving entree
to all golf clubs, ball parks, tennis courts,
etc.
Both the men’s and women's newspa
per clubs are extending their accommo
dations for the convention period, equip
ping additional workrooms, adding din
ing and lounging quarters and other club
facilities. Artists,'cartoonists and Cam
era men will be provided with separate
studios within n block of the Newspaper
Clttb -
Dr. L. J. Cooke, who has resigned as
basketball coach at tbh University of
Minnesota, piloted: ten teams tot the
Western Conference championship dur
ing the 27 years tftat he served a* men
tor of the court game at the Gopher
Institution. ' (
Builds Platform
1| -v
Wm
. f S: |||§g
mm.
**
Homer g. Cummings, chairman of the
Democratic committee on resolutions,
shown drawing up the party platform.
Learned Men Become Wild When
Starved For Oxygen.
London, June 23. —Oxygen starvation
product's some extraordinary effects on
men ascending high mountains. Profes
sor Itarcroft at the Royal Institution
recently told his hearers that during
one of his ascents, after a height of
10,000 feet had been reached, he noticed
one of the party behaving wildly.
At another altitude a highly re
spectable don indulged in lurid language
and there was the case on record of a
man suffering from oxygen starvation
who had written down his sensations,
and as the starvation became acute
started getting his spelling fuddled.
It was characteristic of this starva
tion that, though the victim would know
what to do. as for instance that by
moving 20 yards he would get out of
danger, he would not do so unless
definitely instructed by someone else.
Tlie man who rides the high horse
is likely to get thrown.
Hot Rolls 4 to 7 p. m.
No Deliveries and
Retail Only
15c Per Dozen
Concord Steam Bak
er y
80 W. Corbin St.
<ll <
HI
■ i
HI
■ .
H
I
Guaranteed J
Armature 1
Rewinding I
Reasonable Prices ■
'/'Hm (I
IH 1
Repairs fi
All Kinds of Generator H
yBBMBBWSiijy
, - T :
Why Do People Buy Star Automo
biles? Not Because They Shine!
But because they take the hills on high. And use very lit
tle gasoline. Ask the man that owns one. Call arotlnd
and let one of my salesmen prove their merits. They are .]
the best by test. We have the Durant, Flint and Star B
Cars in stock. Buy now. 3
J.GBLUME’S GARAGE I
11 11 [[j —i
- 11 -" v: r '■ '! " 1 ' ■■■' ■i" '■ i ■ i ■
BOUGHT YOUR PORCH SHADES YET?
Getting warmer every day and the sooner you get yours the more Ralid com
fort you’ll get from your porch this summer. Aerolux Ventilating Shades ol
wood slat construction will keep it cool and coxy. Easily hung, can’t flap.
Phone 164 for estimates and sizes.
H. B. Wilkinson
Concord 164 Kannapolis 2 Mooresville 186
Free-THEATRE TICKETS—FREE
With Each Purchase of SI.OO and Over We Will Give One
25c Ticket to Pastime Theatre
Prices Greatly Reduced
All leathers to select from. Every pair is style-right
and dependable in quality.
New summer styles just received, especially priced for
this occasion. < -
Economical, comfortable, fashionable Sandals for Street,
Sport and Dress wear—
s3.4s, $3.95, $4.95, $5.95, and $6.95 up
Priced Considerably Under Value
S. S. Brown Shoe Store
QUALITY FIRST
PHONE 116
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmMmmm
opOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Getting
Married?
! ! Wedding Invitations . j
{ J Wedding Announcements
“At Home” Cards
!j! Special Invitations
J | Visiting Cards ]
; > Business Cards
Social and Commercial Stationery
KIDD-FRIX
Music and Stationery Company
00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
I Trade With Merchants
I Who Advertise
I They Can Sell Cheaper
Monday, June 23, 1924