PAGE SIX If ItHNDBZVOUS .MOUNTAIN lfK.FMqr Rea* to Donate it to fe PgP» State for a Park. BltaMch, X. C„ Jail. ie.— oP>—The of North Carolina is about to possession of aiuwher bcau- and historic state park. Judge BSpP’ Finley has expressed a desire pßgltaate Rendezvous Mountain, in flP>e> county. to the state, it is an-> MBiri by Major Wade H. Phillips, ||HM>gtor of the Department of Con servation on Development. jMjjudge Finley, he told Major Phillips to the latter, is the own- Kr of die ronnd top of the mountain. Hirhlfh consists of about 100 acres, ■M-he said that he was also negotiat ing for the purchase of some property Hnhra others, who own a part of the ■Approach. 'this, also, may be donated Hitter, he indicated. udge Finley's desire, Major Phil- Enps said, is to donate the Mountain Hfor park and memorial purposes. ( ■Bs In his letter making the offer to ■donate the mountain top as a park. Kludge Finley said: H “The Yadkin River, in Wilkes KCounty, North Carolina, is about 20 K miles broad, bounded by the Blue Hntae on the north, and a lower range. M ~ HOLIDAY NOTICE Ip Tuesday, January 19th, 1926 | LEE’S BIRTHDAY fi | Being a Legal Holiday in the State of North Carolina, !j •: the Banks of Concord Will Not Be Open for Business s I p CONCORD NATIONAL BANK CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK H [' |I! CITIZENS BANK AND TRUST COMPANY i Te Newest of Spring Styles |l; I ARE HERE jjj [SSES /JP \ YES! [ettes 1 I They Are Beau- 1 1 ’ d \ eKpft f ties in all ]jj pes y TJ7 J Shades ]![' .00 VLy $26.95 Jj&S those about to start on their special trip \ ! ithward, we suggest making their starting |j I nt at FISHER’S. For here they will find all ! necessary fineries to make their Southern so- i irn the perfection of comfort and content! \ j. parel and accessories for every hour of this M asant trip, each one expressly designed for the 6 asion, and each one priced far lower than in S expensive resort shops. New New JUST THE HAT You Will Want to Wear and This Is j | Supplied in Colors to Match Coat or Dress j $5.00 TO $9.00 STYLES ARE CORRECT WE KNOW the Brushy Mountains, on the south. “On a spur of the Blue Ridge run ning southeast near Obids (Ashe coun ty) towards Wilkes boro, N. C„ be tween the waters of Reddies River and Lewis Fork Creek, is located this Mountain. “It was on this round, picturesque mountain, overlooking the valley of Reddies River and Lewis Fork Creek, the Yadkin River and the tablelands and distant mountains, that Colonel Benjamin Cleveland assembled amdi trained the 28 patriots whom he af terwards led to a rendezvous at Quak er Mountain, near Morganton, and joined Campbell and William from Virginia, Sevier and Shelby, with their forces from Tennessee, and the Mc- Dowells and others from North Car olina, and later aided materially in winning the Battle of King's Moun tain, that culminated in the final vic tory at Yorktown. "Soldiers from this section also fought under Cleveland at the Battle of Guilford Courthouse. “Colonel Joseph Winston, after whom the city of Winston was nam ed. came from Surry county with 125 men and joined the Wilkes county forces and fought under Cleveland at King's Mountain.” It is the wish of Judge Finley that - the mountain, which he describee ns - being covered with forest growth and - rhododendron, azalea and dogwood aDd r as containing splendid mountain i springs, be considered not only a state park but a shrine of the Revolution. . where the members of the D. A. R. p will be invited to place a memorial tablet and to hold commemorative | meetings. I In announcing Judge Finley's offer, i Major Phillips pointed out that the Department of Conservation and De velopment is vested by law with the I administration of State Parks and is t also empowered to accept on behalf of . the State, gifts of land for park pur poses. He expressed himself as being delighted with Judge Finley's offer t and as having no doubt that the gov erning board of the department will accept the offer nt its next meeting. It is probable, he said, that the new park will not only offer an attractive ' place for sight-seers but will also ' prove valuable as a much needed ad ditional area for forestry experimen ' tation and demonstration. When Rendezvous Mountain is for ' mall.v deeded to the State, North Car olina will have three State parks, the others being the area surrounding the peak of Mount Mitchell, acquired through the efforts of the late Gov ernor Craig, and the historic site and remaining fortifications of Fort Ma con near Beaufort. By act of the Legislature the De partment of Conservation and Devel opment is now vested with the admin istration of eight of the fresh water lakes of Eastern North Carolina, two of which—White Lake and Lake Wae camaw—have attained much popular ity as summer resorts. Making $lO Per Acre on Timber. The Progressive Farmer. If any render threw aside last week’s Progressive Farmer without reading "Making Our Farm Wood lands Pay,” he ought to look up that issue right away and get the benefit of the sound wisdom expressed in Forester Curran's talk with Sam Johnson. Mr. Curran's rules for pre veting forest fires, for getting stands of timber where they do not exist, and for cutting and marketing lim ber and firewood—all these things deserve not only to be read but re membered. It is Mr. Curran's contention Hint by following sound forestry rules, ' farmers can average $lO per year i profits from each acre in timber. Every reader is invited to consider J how many acres he has in woodland and ask himself whether or not he 1 is adopting the rules and policies ] that will give him this return, i While visiting a thoughtful sar i mor a few weeks ago. he brought out | a point we have never heard emplia i sized. I'ntil a few years ago, our i farmer-friend pointed out, timber in ' order to be easily marketed had to i be near a railroad. Our Southern 1 woodlands lying near railway lines | were being very rapidly cut over and i sold. Good timber at any consider l able distance from a railroad, how | ever, cou'.d be marketed only by i long wagon-hauls over poor roads, | the result being that most, of it was ' not sold at all. i Tile coming of the modern truck 1 together with improved roads, as our friend pointed out, has changed all this. Timber ten to twenty miles from railways is now often just .as accessible as timber one or two miles from a depot was fifteen years ago. It is plain to see the consequences of this suddenly acquired accessibili ty of the country's great timber re sources. Timber is being cut and destroyed far more rapidly than it ought to be and is therefore bringing less than it will hereafter. Thousands of farmers who had merer been offer ed anything of consequence for their timber have been ready to accept ridiculously low prices simply be cause they have not realized the worth of what they had. Within a few years from now, most of the large, mature timber so suddenly made available for the mar kets by the coming of trucks and good roads will have been exhausted. We shall then have to use each year only about ns much timber as we . grow. And when that time comes prices will inevitably go much higher thanthey are today. Professor Richardson, of Dart mouth : “A crisis confronts the Amer ican college . . . whose true signifi cance is not always understood. The college is suffering from the results of its own success.” PAINS ALL OVER Mr Says She Took Cardui and Never Saw Sock Improve neat—Was So Weak Covkb’t Stand. Weathersby, Miss.—Mrs. James M. Hall, of this place, writes that she was “getting weaker all the time” When Cardui, the woman’s tonic, was first brought to her attention. After she had taken Cardui a while, •he writes that she “never did see such an improvement” "I suffered all the time and had gains all over,” says Mrs. Hall. “I eras so weak I could not stand. My Skin was cold and flabby. I did not have any color. I had always (wea a very active woman—used to outdoor exercise, walking and going where I pleased, and to get down, not able to get myself a drink, waa fund til ft hardship. "Nothing seemed to help me, till I began on Cardui. The first bottle seemed to strengthen me, and I sent for five more. By the time I bad taken these, I was on my feet going around, doing my work, gained in health and strength. “I took two more bottles, and I am well and strong. Can work my garden. I haven’t had any more Ask your druggist NC-185 THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE MIAMI LENDS UNCLE SAM $1 £OO,OOO j TO RUSH IMPROVEMENTS ON HER HARBOR^ ■.Miami harbor skylibs WASHINGTON. D. C.-Miami moves too fast for Congress. Unable to slow down her prog ress to wait for the formal unwind- j Ing of red tape here to provide the cash for necessary harbor improve ments. the “Magic City” of the South is advancing $1,500,000 to Uncle Sam in order that work may be begun at once on deepening and widening the channel from Miami’s harbor to the sea. The necessity for improving and enlarging Miami’s harbor was proven to Congress a year ago and authorizations were made for a government expenditure of $1,650,- . 000 for the work. The cash, how ■ ever, has not yet been made avail able. In the meantime, riding the crest of the Florida boom, Miami has be come a real maritime port. With railroads swamped by the tremen dous movement of construction | Gunning Again |-v r— — —•— A.— tew " litk, Only a Few Days Old-And Look at Him || materials and supplies, it was nat ural that a considerable part of this traffic should bo shipped by i water. The result has been Bis cayne Bay has become one of the busiest ports on the Atlantic. Un able to reach the docks, many of the larger freighters have been forced to lighter their cargoes, but vessels of shallow draught crowd the water until the view off Bay Front Park, where the city is spending $3,300,000 to make a Bay Side beauty spot, shows nothing in the immediate foreground but a | forest of masts. One morning re cently no less than twenty _ large freighters were lying outside in the ocean waiting for a chance to unload cargo. Some of them had been there a week. But not only in freight traffic has the demand on Miami’a harbor facilities mushroomed almost over i night. Miami has not inly become a “port of call" for the majoi steamship lines operating from i New York, Philadelphia and Balti- j more to Cuba and Panama, but sh« , has become the prime objective and i terminus of a new passenger and j freight service inaugurated by the ( Clyde line,- operating- between , New York and Miami. This aer- 1 vice provides sailings three-times J a week on spic and Bpan new boats which provide the last word in ' comfort and convenience. To keep abreast of these de imands on her harbor terminal fa* cilities, Miami simply couldn’t wait any longer for Unde Sam to get around to starting work on the new 25-foot channel. 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