PAGE EIGHT What the World Is Doing As Seen by Popular Mechanics Magazine if rL \ jA T| C ~ ! ” Motor-Driven Roller Skates *' Run on Rough Ground Propelled by small acetylene or $ gasoline-burning motors, roller skates devised by a German engineer are ' said to develop considerable power , and will run not only on pavements - but on rough surfaces as well. Con trola are operated through conuec • tions reached with the hands. The - engine is built on principles dis . covered in making small motors for airplanes. • • • • New Steel, Hard Yet Pliant, Takes Razor Edge Many of the qualities of the cele brated Damascus steel are said to be . . found in a modern product which an - Ohio man has developed by a secret ‘ process. He combines iron and car bon in such away that the result ing steel will bend, keep an edge of razor sharpness, is tough and can be driven through other steels with out breaking. A bar of the material, "‘-fifteen inches long, was tempered to five different degrees, one end of it being hard enough to cut glass, a *• section was sharpened like a razor : Women Committing Suicide Trying For Boyish Forms Hi'ttie F. Cattell in New York Mirror. Women are, literally, committing suicide—to get thin. The mania for the “boyish form” is ‘ increasing mortality and disease. ! It has become so much of a prob lem that some of the greatest minds * of t’he medical profession have gath *r ered in New. York to devise ways and .. means to bring women to their senses. r *- ft isn't the little flapper, who lias been held responsible for all of the foolish fads of the last year, who to blame for the dilemma in which the physicians find Themselves. It s the middle aged woman, who is old enough to know better. It's the wealthy woman from 115 to 50, ■who will spend $25 a day to go into a gymnasium and be pound ed for an hour—until her flesh is black and blue—in order to break the • fatty tissues in her obese form, who is the subject of conversation at this gathering of members of the Ameri can Medical Association. It’s the woman who, like Gaby Desiys, prefers death to the loss of attractiveness —to men. Relief Assured. As a yesulf of the two-day confer ence, presided over by Dr. Wendell Important Price Policy for HUDSON-ESSEX We Discontinue F. O. B. Factory Prices and Announce “At -Your-Door” Prices Effective February 15, These Cars Will Be Priced to Include Freight, War Tax and Equipment. No Charge Will Be Added for Handling. There Will Be Nothing Else to Pay. Remember these are NOT F. O. B. Factory Prices, but the DELIVERED Prices at Your DOOR The Price You Pay to Drive Away All Cars Are Complete with the Following Equipment: Bumper Front and Rear .. . Electric Windshield Cleaner .. . Rear View Mirror ... Transmission Lock (Built 1n)... Radiator Shutters Moto-Meter ... Combination Stop and Tail Light Hudson Super-Six COACH - • -«137«. Brougham - • 1630 Sedan • • - * 1825 Essex Six Coacb *920 Convenient and Easy Purchase Terms For Those Who Desire Concord Motor Co. Hudson is World’s Largest Builder of “Sixes” and Third Largest# wide* of Motorcars and would cut dry hair without honing or stropping, while other parts in the same bar would cut off a spike under blows of a hammer, would spring or could be bent back ward and forward with the thumb and forefinger without breaking. Vanadium is an important element used in the preparation of the steel. Salmon Travel Hundreds of Miles a Week That salmon travel ajnazing dis tances in short periods is indicated by tha journey of one fish which was liberated at the southern end of Nova Seotia last June and was caught less than a month ’-"ter in the Moisie river, Quebec. Identification was made by means of the silver tag which had been placed in one of the salmon’s fins when it was first s captured. Its journey was between 800 to 1,200 miles long. By means of the tags, valuable knowledge is r being gained as 1 > the habits of 5 salmon and other fish. e r* * * Snubbers for Ford Car Made at Home After he had broken three front springs in on© summer, an autoist r looked around for a cheap means Os preventing further breakage. The remedy he finally demised consisted in riveting snubbers, made from an old belt, around the front axle and ’i h .l, the frame of the car. The belting :o was of four-ply canvas, 5 in. wide, it and was cut in two, overlapping the a splices 4 in. The illustration shows NT the installation dearly. Phillips, president-elect of the asso ciation, the fat and the thin women will obtain relief. The present standard of weights and measures for adults will be re vised completely. Safe and effective ways to increase and reduce weight will be evolved. The dangers of ov erweight and underweight will be known. But it may be a year before the physicians will have this information for women. This much could be deduced from the learned talks about fat yester day. There will be no attempt by the. physicians to bring back the large-! busted figures of Floradora sextette | days. The “bustless.” slouchy form which the commercial artists like to draw and the middle-aged women like to imitate in real life will be listed as sickly. The well rounded figure of the Fay Lanphier type will probably be the ideal female figure: a sort of cross between the “boyish form” and the more than buxom type of the ’HOs. If you are overfat or underweight, don't think that you're 'the only one who has any troubles. .Mixing Concrete in the Wheelbarrow A simple and easy method of mix ing concrete by hand in a Wheelbar row is shown'in A- the illustration. Fig. 1 show's a batch of dry 'Ey material consist- / ——ing of four shovelfuls of gravel, two of iLf sand and one of cement. Fig. 8 —y? shows the first \ operation, work- l7r in ing the material Es to the front of [— \ the barrow, with ca—Ar-v a round-pointed TF~y--T-7*H shovel. Fig. 3 ’Ey V±y shows the same t batch after it J/ has been worked Zqp-v back again ia t * ie Bam ® wa J C V and some water has been added. The material it worked to the front again, leaving, it in the position shown in Fig. 4, and then again backward. It is noW thoroughly mixed and will keep it self in the position shown in Fig. 9. This method has been found entirely ■ satisfactory. • * * Repairing Leaky Eaves Trough It sometimes happens that a sec tion of eaves trough rusts through in one place, while the rest of it is still in good condition. This can easily be repaired as follows: Out a piece of canvas large enough to cover the hole, coat it with tar and press it down over the hole. Then coat the patch with tar on the in ner side and let it dry. The trough should, of course, be well cleaned and dried before applying the patch. r• * * , ([To prevent exposed black pipo > from rusting, cover it with a grease ) made of 1 lb. lard, 1 oz. gum cam phor and 1 on black lead. The womefi who have been swamp ing beauty columns of the dailies with their requests for diet ami ex ercise* for their particular needs aren't the only ones who have recog nized that fat is a problem. Why Is Fat? It was disclosed yesterday that for years physicians have been studying the question, “Why is fat?” For instance, Dr. Solomon Strouse. of Chicago, told the medical men that he has been experimenting for six years on control of fat deposits in the human body. And there have been experiments conducted on grayhounds and mastiffs by Dr. A. J. Carlson, of the Univer sity of Chicago. For the first time in history, the 1 fat woman's problem lias become a , scientific problem. Also the thin ! woman's problem is now science’s. | Credit for the investigation goes to I Mrs. William Brown Moloney. After receipt, of 20,000 letters from women who wanted to reduce, she appealed to physicians to find that they had no standard of weights and measures except those compiled after the Civil War! So she asked the medical men to help her. “Just the job we’ve been after,” they told her. The Metropolitan fiife Insurance Company has long considered fat a risk. Same for underweight, Dr. ■ME CONCORD IMILY TRIBUNE V\J . # m*m ml and nothing - else but! QUALITY —that’s Prince Albert all You’ll never say "quit,” and that’s a fact, over. Just about the finest, kindest Yes, Sir/ You’ll have the little old tobacco that ever tumbled into a briar world by the tail when you sign up with or corncob. We said "kindest.” That this big-league smoke. Sitting pretty vmcans P. A.’s consideration for your and no mistake. Cool and sweet and tongue and throat. No bite. No parch. P. A. sifts into-yeur system and removed by thelPrmcJAlbert process. Nothing but cool comfort, refreshing knocks pipe-peeves galley west. as a breeze from the sea. Quality, you bet. That’s why men P. A. can’t.bite or parch. The Prince who thought they never could pal with Albert process takes care of that. You a pipe are now P. A. fans .. . loyal, can go to it from the minute you finish enthusiastic boosters. Let’s get going. * breakfast until you sign of? at night. Slip into top-speed and head for the shop f Slow or fast. P. A.’s quality makes you that hands out smoke-gladness in tidy red want to smoke pipe-load after pipe-load, tins, marked "Prince Albert.” Today! mlSB' anBL Prince albert m —no other tobacco is like itl O loss, U. J. Rwnlda TotnttS • Commas, Wlmtoo-sn.ni. N. c. . I.ouis I.ubin said. The overweight dies earlier than the thin person. Other Snags Found. The physicians are running into snags in their new work. They have learned that heredity, and racial types, and a lot of other things con. tribute to the problems. For instance, the New Englnndcr is uaturail spare and her Southern sister is naturally fat, and the west ern girl is husky and broad shouldered aud hipped. And their weights must vary accordingly. A mother can taze oer infant, to a baby health station in New York and have him judged according to height arid weight. The time will come soon, the doctors say, when the women will go to their physicians to get the same information about themselves. And fashion in figures may then go to blazes, or to normality! Yonr Food Tells Your Age. Scientists have found after years of observation thlt iu coinmuuities or districts where the food i« of very limited variety and pactically the same every day that the people lose the appearance of youth much more quiekly than in those where they vary their diet and use plenty of fruit or other vegetable products. According to one authority women are most affected. “Judged by or dinary standards,” he says, “girls of twenty-two or twenty-three would be taken for thirty o* more and wom en of forty look as old as those of fifty-five or aixty.” The necessity of fruit with its gentle acids and vitaminee and its easy digestibility is now recognized the world over as the easiest, pleasj aotest and most efficient variant of the diet, varying the fruits with the season so that none of them palls on the appetite. Os all the fruits available in the temperature zone the .apple and the orange are the ones, which can bq used daily and several times a day without cloy inf the appetite. This iu due to the acid of the- fruits which prevents the closing effect or some of, the sweeterland less acid fruitaj? With the .variety in diet produred by a liberal use'of'fruit ‘ each day comes the cooper vatlou of human energy. The energy wasted in digest ing a heavy and unvaried diet wast es the human bodrsnd brings <>n. are useful in helping to. repair the wastes and carry off waste matter of. the body. They furniuh sweets need ed iu every' diet in the. most palatable form. What it Means When We .Patronize Bootleggers. The Paogressive Farmer. The first thing to think abMit is personal influence. All of us have in fluence. Even the poorest and most ignorant man has it. There is the influence of example, of sash ion, of custom. Let a man or boy find that you drink and neighbors A and neighbor B drink and neighbor O, and he decides that drinking i« the hormal thing. Let a man or boy find that yon refuse to dcjpk and it sets him wondering if he should not re fuse also. There are those who drink audthose who do not. Y°u have one vote to cast, one man’s influence to throw- in the balance, for one.side or the other. Which side deserves it most? Then there is influence of financial patronage or support. This is always important. Not a bootlegger would be in business today if somebody didn t make it to his financial inter est to do so, Every time you order a quart of whiskey, you add strength, life, encouragement, stimulation to the bootlegging business. And what is bootleging business doing? It is such young men ns the one found dead in his oar yesterday morning.No doubt he was once the ptide of a fond farm mother but today they are burying his body and her hopes in, a disgrace that not even death can dignify, nor are girls even exempt. On our table is a let ter from a man in another state ask ing where a young girl who has brought shame to her family and blighted all her future can be sent— and no doubt in the vast majority of such cases it is the dethronement of reason and prudence through “taking « drink” that starts the tragedy. These are of course . extreme in stances. But all of us can think of oth« boys such ..as the one we rt eat this moment—a lovable, fellow with fyie qualities of mind and heart who. should by .now have jhad a. distinfuished career , m d the happiness of a home, but drink ing has defeated all thq high hoptk •f bin family and his friends. Anil all "f us can think of women such Ufi.one we recull now—of fine iuiiplV aid .fine c haracter,, but whose life is a tragedy because ol what whiskey has done to the man ehe trusted. Every time we patronize the boot- j legging business, we help support, 1 nurture, strengthen and protect an j i institution that is even now prepar ing to take some boy. maybe, your boy or your neighbor's boy ana carry | , him to such a death as the poor fel- j low who died in his car yesterday j . morning. Every time you buy a 1 ; quart of whisky you throw your in ; fluqnoe Itnd your support to an insti ; tution which is destined to take j some girl—maybo your girl or some neighbor's girl—and make her life [ a tragedy for her and a hearthicak ; for her parenta. Post and Flagg's Cotton Letter. New York. Feb. 2$. —The market continued dull and quiet. Sentiment, is still very bearish but the market shows resistance to pressure. Short covering continues in March and there is a persistent demand for new crop months. Wall street has been a heavy sell er in sympathy with a weak stock market. There in some talk around that when March contracts are out of tho way there will be a loosening up in spot circles in the south. If so, prices will undoubtedly sag .ixjjL Ol)i ijt.‘ o. ~jQ Waa This Canocrti Woman Why Tails Her Enpsriuncs. All too often women accspt their pains and aches-as natural to their sex. They fail to realise that weak kidneys are often to blame lor that backache, those headaches, diszjr spells and that tired,, depressed feeling. Thousands have found new heaJLh and strength by helping the weakened kidneys with Doan’s Pills—a stimulant, diuretic. This Concord case is one of many: Mrs. C. L. ’Mlsenheimer, 166 E, Depot St., says: “My kidneys were t awfully weak and ae.tqd irregularly. My back ached so’,badly 1 could hardly straighten up. Dizzy, ner vous headaches made my Condition worse. Doan's Pills, from Gibson’s Drug Store strengthened my back and relieved the pains. The head aches didn't trouble me and my kidneys acted regularly.” 60c at all dealers, t Festar-Ml>- bura Co., Mfrs. r Buffalo. N, Y. • . r.-, . r somewhat | The trade still, continues to ab sorb on setbacks and we feel that."they are prepared to take all offerings from the south should they , appear. We continue to favor pur i chases of new Crop months on all j weak spots. POST AND FLAGG. The superintendent of construction of a large building received the fol lowing note from his foreman: “I’m seuding in. the accident report on Casey's foot when he struck It with the pick. Now. under 'Re marks.' do you want mine or Ca sey’s V “Heet’' Relieves Instantly WitJj applicator attached to cork, just brush “Hcet” over the p&in ares, whether in knee*, feet, legs, hands, shoulders, back, neck or body. In stantly, you feel this harmless, glori ous, penetrating heat draw the pain, and stiffness right out of the aching or swollen joint, muscle ot neuritis-ridden herve. Besides, “Heet” scatters the congestion »»i«f estab lishes a cure. "Heet’^.contains two soothing, pene trating ingredients, too expensive to , use in ordinary liniments or anal gesies. “Heet” is a clean, pleasant „ liquid j doesn’t stain, blister or irri- * tate the skin and. costa only 60 cents J at any drug stork. Thursday, Feb’. 25, 1026 The s’.hool teacher, in trying to ex plain tile meaning of the word “slow ly.” illustrated it by walking across the floor. • When she asked the class to teU her how she walked, she nearly faint ed when mittle Mabel shouted ‘‘Bow legged.’’ Professor—Cau you prove that the square of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares of the two sides of this triangle? Student—l don't have to prove it. 1 admit it. BfUfIUSJHACKS From Which Kentucky Man Suf fered Two -or Three Timet a'V Month, RelieTed by • Black-Draught. Lawrenceburg, Ky.—Mr. J. P. Kevins, a local coal dealer and far mer, about two years ago learned of the value of Thedford’e Black- Draught liver medicine, and now ho Bays: “Until then I suffered with se , vere bilious attacks that came on two or three times each month- I would get nauseated. I would have dizziness and couldn’t work. *'l would take pills until I was worn-out with them. I didn't seem to got relief. After taking the pills my bowels would act a couple or . throe times, then I would be very “k neighbor told me of Black- Draught and 1 began Its use. I * never have found so much relief as It gave me. I would not ba without it for anything. “It seemed to cleanse my whole Bystem and make me feel like new. I would take & few doses—get rid ypf the hije and have my usual clear head feel full of ’pep* and oould do-twice the wosk.” . One cent a dose, » MO-161 VdUtfiaraasP.