PAGE SIX Hji&NFORD CASE SET glfOR TRIAL AT ALBEMARLE HpjlSged With Murder of Prisoners ■ in Stanly County. March 2:!. —The term |bf Star superior court, which con ■Hi here next Monday morning. Had tree which cither .fudge M ■Stack o?' Judge Michael Schenck ■jrUl preside. is expected to bo one of Hb* mbs^ interesting terms of crim ■aal ipourt ever held in this county. Bp, that (during the term the case Kigninst former C’onvict Boss Cran ■ord will' be tried on a charge of ■having murdered two convicts. K- Cmnfprd. it will be remembered, Bwas given a preliminary hearing be (fore Judge McElroy several months - - - . ■ i ■ ~ - ■ ■■■. .r----:-,.-.'. . =e f F |pr-- NOW CHRYSLERSB:erVESiVOU This Superb Performance at New Lower prices^ Chrysler reduced delivered prices benefit of the neui lower tax rate. _ Price for price-more emphatically today than ever sMI )j /1, . —Chrysler 58 gives the utmost m mechanical per- , A! ’Rn fl / 1 \J/L *™ s ‘ f - b ■ Dctrolt formance, economy and dependability, riding com- wj ly / i[l VI fort, driving ease, and charm of appearance. It V I yjl Its - effortless speed ability carries you mile after mile at 58 miles an hour, if you wish, in quiet, vilygationless comfort. Its wealth of power whisks you through traffic tangles, from 5 to 25 miles in 8 seconds. As - much as anything, we believe, you will appre- Chrysler -58"— 7Wm f car. ssss- Road. cbte its ability to give you the satisfying economy ot Z 5 miles to the gallon of gasoline. / our-wheei brakes u m C ht cost. jl , , ... . , , , CHRYSLER 70 — Phaeton. $1395; Coach, And perhaps you will better understand the growing if 44 *; *«“**«*'• sie is. sedan. sit9s. Royal ! preference for the Chrysler“sß” when you know that its new lower prices give you the identical perform- Chrysler imperial -so-—Phaeton ance, identical quality and unmatched beauty which tuts “fe™,,': nave always placed it above comparison in its field. * tr * ww.- sssvs. Sedan. seven-passenger. $3i95. Sedan-limousine. s3t>9s. We are eager to prove, by personal demonstration* *ll prices f.o.b. Detroit, subject to current Federal the scores of quality advantages, which, at its new *““* I electrifying low price of *845, make Chrysler “58” -*** w “ h/ult bai ‘° on “ rrs 1 the supreme motor car value of today. ..m t ”yK plan. Chrysler dealers and superior Chrysler i; v service everywhere. Oi a w-qw tp\\ t All Chrysler models are protected against theft Z\ I* B 11 1 Y by the Fedco patented car numbering system. * •• A exclusive with Chrysler, which cannot be coun | At WHITE AUTO CO. without conclusive evidence of tampering. Kg I East Corbin Street Phone 298 I ! CHRYSLER “58" WJ I | Our Gas Appliances I are Okehed iff will be interested to know that, to JL assure the utmost safety for every cus tomer, our gas equipment and appliances are tested by the Appliance Testing Lab oratory maintained by the American Gas Association in co-operation with represen tatives of the entire gas industry, the U. S. Bureau of Mines, Bureau of Standards and Public Health Service. |f; < When you use our equipment, and pur chase appliances through us, you may be confident that they are tested for safe and satisfactory operation. Remember, also, that we maintain a staff of skillful service men to inspect and repair your equipment. > Call on them whenever you need them. # Concord & Kannapolis Gas Go. El ® CONCORD, N. C P Gas&Tßower \muy Corporation ago, and that judge, having found that there was probable cause, sent a -bill before the grand jury, which found two bills against the convict superintendent, one charging mur der and one assault on a prisoner. He was released under bond to answer before a jury at the March criminal terra. The preliminary hearing attracted state-wide attentiion anti the final trial next week will be watched by i the general public with more thau ordinary interest. Bananas for Athletes. Bananas have become popular as a training food for athletes in England. Professional trainers favov bananas because of the readiness with which they are digested and because they ’ contain a higher percentage of calo ries than most fruits. The trainers maintain that before a game, between halves, ets., when the players are pressed for time, when they are more ore less exhausted, the banana also carries the most suitable food. The I banana also carries the guarantee that until its natural germproof wrap-1 per is peeled away it is free from' l contamination. A small boy recently digging in a garden in Oshkosh. Wisconsin, found a hollow stone containing the note, "Fort Howard. February 1830, In dians attacking. Ammunition running low. (Signed) J. D., commander.” THE COl MILLIONS WASTED IN COAL, LUMBER, OIL AND WATER By S. W. STRAUS, PraaldSnt American Society for Thrift I SUCH rapid Btrldes are being made In the realms of sdentlfle •esearch and invention that we teem to be living in an age of niracles. In childhood we thrilled it the tales of the “Arabian Nights’ Entertainments.” But even those tuahge stories revealed no more eonderful accomplishments than u-e the feats performed by the , nodern man of science. a. W. STRAUS I Amid this progress, however, we are lagging behind In point of waste elimination, for In the field of production and distribution there is a prodigious loss. It la estimated that one-half of all the gas produced in the United States never gets into the pipes that should take It to the consumers. In coal, it has been estimated that half the output is wasted In the mine, and what with the careless methods of distribution, of firing methods in furnaces and the like, one authority maintains that one twentieth of our available coal sup ply Is used and nineteen-twentieths wasted. Mr. Stuart Chase In his book, “The Tragedy of Waste,” summar izes some of the outstanding wastes:—coal, 750 million tons per year; water power, 50 million horse-power per year; oil, 1 billion barrels per year; natural gas 600 billion cubic feet per year; lumber, 6 billion cubic feet per year. There must be a greater national thrift conscientiousness. We must learn to be concerned with losses even though their personal effect may seem remote. We must learn to appraise thrift not only as a personal virtue which shall aid In our Individual success, but we must learn to think of It In term* of general economic betterment, I yes, Indeed (and this seems like an echo of the war) In terms o( patriotism. WATKINS MURDER CASE TO BE TRIED NEXT WEEK Gray Brothers and Carl Sweet Al leged to Have Killed Aged Mao For Ro bery. Albemarle, March 23. — A case of interest to be tried at the March | term of the Stanly county superior court, which will start Monday, will ! be that against John Gray, Theodore j Gray and Carl Sweat, charged with | the murder of ‘Dad’ Watkins on the night of October 30. Watkins’ body ! was found in n burning barn just north of Albemarle on the night fol lowing the murder. John Gray and Carl Sweat later confessed that they . killed Watkins for his money, and in their confession they implicated Theodore Gray, a brother of John Gray, claiming that he burned Wat kin's h ad and nrino in the furnace at the Wiscasset school, where he was janitor. The evidence, however, against Theodore Gray is not very strong, and he is now out on bail. Best Not Good Enough. Most of the great men in the world have been small men some where in their past, and it has long been a question as to whether a king, either of a country, or of tin, cattle or cotton, could dis tinguish himself in any email com munity. We know that once an ex- j president of the United States was! defeated for some s{pnll local office, i But more striking proof is presented in a recent experience of the world famous Polish pinniet, Paderewski. Traveling in Switzerland he stop ped in a hotel in Lucerne and J registered as a pianist. While in the j case that night the proprietor, an | ignorant man. came and informed him that his pianist had failed to! show up «uid offered him 50 francs j to take his place for the evening. Paderewski decided to do it tor a lark. But after he had played for about a quarter of an hour the boss came and told him he would have to quit. The customers complained ot his music! The churlish conduct of skippers of steamers was responsible for a ca lamity which overtook the Cambridge crew in the annual boat race with Oxford in 1851). The race was rowed on a stormy day. and just after a heavy fall of snow. When going to the start Cambridge shipped a large quantity of water, and when their boat was half-full a steamer went in front of them. They pulled on, how ever, until the boat was on tfiie point of sinking, when the wash from four steamers swamped it. Philadelphia baseball fans would not be surprised if Connie Mack would retire from the active manage ment of the Athletics at the close of the 1920 season. Mack is now in his 63rd year and has had a long and strenuous career in the national game. ''Senaroita de Alvares, the Spanish woman tennis champion, ia in her 20th year and has engaged in tourna ment play aince aha was IS. I D DAILY TRIBUNE WHAT THE FARM ' WOMEN ARE DOING As Reported by thr Home Agents in Various Parts of the State. Shelby. March 23.—OP)—Many fine old pieces of silver that have been stored away for years in boxes and drawers in Cleveland county homes have been brought out and made as gcod as new by the salt, soda and aluminum bath process, reports Miss Irma Wallace. Mrs. A. D. Warlick. of Belwood. brought in an old castor that had been stored away for years and it came out so bright and clean that it is now being used ns a demon stration of what can be accomplished. Gastonia. March 23,—CP)—Prizes were awarded to Mrs. Spnrgo Carpen ter. Mrs. Ben Barbee and Mrs. L. A. Barbee, of the Landers community in Gaston county, for making the great est improvements in their kitchen and dining rooms, reports Miss Nell Pick ens, home agent. In the Robinson community. Mrs. Robinson and Mrs. I.inoborger were tied for first place, and the prizes were divided. Mrs. Robinson values her improvements at S2OO. and re | marked that she would not go back to I her old kitchen for more than that ! amount, if she could not make any j changes in it. I Roanoke Rapids, X. C.. March 23. j —CP)—Twenty-five Halifax county farm women have entered the garden contest and will endeavor to serve vegetables from their gardens every day this year, according to Miss Hazel Erwin, home agent in this cofcnty. April 15th is the final en try date for this contest, and it is expected that many more club women will enroll before that date. A new woman’s club has been organized at Rosemary and the members have started work with kitchen and home improvement. Durham. March 2fl—CP)—The girls clubs organized at Watha and Wil lard in Pender county are each plan ning to send a representative to the annual club short course at State Col lege this summer, reports Miss Geor gia Piland, home agent. Tile girls representing these clubs will take different courses and Will then exchange work in their clubs. At a recent joint meeting of these two clubs, methods of baking a pound cake three different ways were demonstrated. The tireless cooker, oil stove and wood stove were used in baking, but all the girls favored the wood stove as being more practical for farm use. Rockingham. March 23.—(P)—Fif ty settings of eggs will be bought and furnished to poultry dub member- of Richmond county by the Kiwanis Club of Hamlet, reports Mrs. Anna L. Harris, home agent. Club members securing these eggs will bo limited to three breeds, Rhode Island Reds, Barred Rock and White Leghorns. The Peachpland Poultry Club has requested the entire fifty settings, but other clubs in the county ate working out plans for financing from other civic bodies. j Sipithfield, March 23.—CP)—Poul ; try club members in Johnston county are studying culling, feeding, care of baby chicks and broilers, and how to preserve eggs in water glass, states (Miss Minnie Lee Garrison, the home agent. i Many of the members are planning to visit the poultry department at | State College for further information jon these subjects. Preliminary to a campaign on meal j planning and service, over 100 worn • en attended a meeting of the county council recently. Miss Mary Thomas, nutrition specialist at State College, gave a talk on meal planning and made a demonstration on serving. Tarboro. March 2,’f— OP) —A diet menu has been prepared by the home agent for the inmates of the Edge combe county home. at the request of the county commissioners, reports Miss Virginia E. Watson, home agent. The menu recommended will be a little more expensive than the one served in the past. Miss Watson believes, however, that the added expense can be kept down by growing all vegetables on the farm and by canning the surplus fruits and vegetables in season. This is in Une with the nutrition work be ing done in the county, and is a re sult of several well balanced meals served to the commissioners by organ-- | ized home demonstration clubs, the ; home agent says. Lexington. March 23.—(P)—As a part of the tnilk-for-health campaign started in Davidson county, all the j children attending the Reeds school have been weighed and measured, j states Miss Elizabeth Cornelius, home I agent. Miss Cornelius is being as j sisted in this work by the county ! nurse and all the school children in the county will be enrolled in the campaign before it closes, she says, Demonstrations on the preparation and serving of hot lunches are being given to local teachers and sugges tions made for school lunches, so that | the teachers can assist in this nutri tion work. Columbus, N. C„ March 23.—(P)— Twenty undernourished children of the Columbus consolidated school in Polk county have been served hot cocoa or soup five times a week for the past month, as a part of the nu- 1 trition work in the county, reportß Miss Lois Holderbaum, home agent. These children were weighed and measured at the beginning of the pe riod and re-weighed at the end. The greatest gain was sixpounds, in the case of one child. The smallest im provement was a gain of only one half pound. As a result of this demonstration, many of the children are now bring ing a bottle of milk to drink each day, according to Miss Holderbaum. Noah Webster, nutbor of the “Am erican Dictionary of the English Lan guage,” was responsible for the change in America of the “oar” ending to “or.” Thus labour, honour, behav ioiur, became labor, honor and behav ior In America. Fresher Than The Fresh IN THESE days when advertising I siogans, trite and otherwise, stare at us in the subway and trolley, meet us at every turning of the road, spring at us from the pages of our daily papers—even distract our atten tion, from an adjoining column, just as the hard-boiled flapper is about to become a blushing bride—new slogans are apt to receive scant interest and to be dismissed as far-fetched or as mere advertising "bunk.” We are fed up on them I They tell us when to “re-tire," follow us “in our sleep,” and, as we butter our morning toast, remind us of the great hereafter. They jeer at us on our way to the dentist, with their bold claims as to how we might have made hat dreaded visit unnecessary. They irge us to buy soap that will preserve .he peaches-and-cream complexion of our long-lost youth. They tell us how to cure everything but housemaid's knee. And, any morning, we expect to see that lack supplied, in glaring letters on some subway poster. Now there is a new slogan— " Fresher than the Fresh”—which makes as much impression upon the majority of us as do the license-num ,bers on the rapidly passing automo biles. Nevertheless, to those who Key West Starts Last Stage of 122 Mile Auto Road Over Sea; Many Changes as Quaint Old City Feels Thrill of Progress ____ _______ _______^ ARTISTS CONCEPTION OP THE OVERSEAS \ ACOMEAHED SECTWSOE ROADWAY PASSING _ THE C AT* , L .T , ,'T T 'CO EAYO'N. I H .t', v.i.TH WILL GREET THE FIRST MOTORISTS OVER THE HIGHWAY The beautiful old city of Key West which is nearer to a foreign ■ country than it is to the mainland of America, being t>o milea from Havana, Cuba, and 122 miles from the mainland of Florida, is re sponding to the energy of her citi zens who are working together and whole heartedly for progress. _ Recently the county commis sioners of Monroe County, Fla., in which Key West is located, and who control the construction of its 122 mile auto highway to the mainland, granted a tentative franchise to the Turner Co., en gineers of Minneapolis, for the construction of toll bridges over the deep water gaps to be crossed by ! the road. This franchise will be come permanent upon the perform - j ance of certain obligations by the contracting company. As if to em phasise the profitableness of the route, W. J. Conners of Buffalo, In Key West recently said he would j be glad to be one of twelve men ,' subscribing <1,000,000 to build the bridges. i One of the features of the new highway which has already been built across about twelve miles of ocean and keys from Key West toward the mainland, will be a a twenty-four inch water main to , conduct a supply of fresh water from tbs mainland. The building of the pipe line was favorably • foted ea at a apodal session of ths have given the food question some thought, this catch-phrase carries more than a modicum of truth. Take peas, for example. If we could step into our kitchen-garden, gather them from the vines and cook them at once, nothing could be fresh er; although this, of course, would be possible only during one season of the year. But here is what really happens, since so few of us can have a kitchen garden. First the farmer handles them, while picking, loading and conveying them to a place where they are packed in car-load lots. Then they are shipped to the city, probably incurring numerous delays en route. The jobber next handles them, and from him they go to the green-grccer, in whose store they may lie for some time before we happen along and purchase them. By now, there is little left of their pristine freshness. As a matter of fact, a great part of the peas which are served to us in the winter as fresh peas really come from the Western part of Mexico, along the gulf of lower California. So it is easy to see that these foods, when served on the American table, are not fresh. Canned peas are really fresher than fresh peas. For. in the case of canned Florida legislature called by Gov. i John W. Martin. From the mainland the road is ' also progressing toward Key . West, having been built seven ; miles South of Florida City, and also throughout the length of Key Largo. 30 miles long, the first big island from the mainland. The waters along the route are i every color of the rainbow, and the journey will be filled with a thou sand surprises for motorists. The different keys or islands on the way are very fertile and will pro duce all aorta of tropical products, fruits and vegetables. Since the building activity In Florida began. Key West has been *ery busy. Steamers from all ports find deep water in Key West. The city has a fine system of deep water piers built by the late Henry M. Flagler, and the largest ships in the world dock comfort ably. Approximately 51 million feet of lumber has been coming each month into Key West by steamer, and shipped into Florida over the Florida East Coast Rail way, which passes over the sea to the Florida mainland by huge bridges and viaducts. Mr. Flagler spent 60 million dollars in bridg ing the sea with steel. Key West has several handsome new real estate subdivisions, and new concreted streets, and many fine new buildings. The popula tion is about 20 thousand. The city baa built a fine golf links and Wednesday, Mar. 24, 1926 peas, the peas are gathered, vines and all, at a time when the peas contaii the greatest food value. They ari immediately conveyed to the vinery, where they are threshed out by machin ery. After being washed, they art graded. They then go into the cans, where they are sufficiently cooked to preserve them. All this is accom plished within twelve hours; so that the canned peas, when they come to the table, are within twelve hours of being absolutely fresh, while the so called fresh peas undergo many days of deterioration ar.d decay before reaching the consumer. Here, then is one advertising slogan which tells the absolute truth. Canned foods are fresher than the fresh. For there has been nothing whatever to detract from the freshness which was theirs when they went into the can. On the contrary, no deterioration is possible while in the can, because of the complete exclusion of aii air, and because of the perfect sterilization which has taken place. The housewife, today, is finding that a great industry has provided her with a marvelous substitute for the kitchen-garden, supplying her with practically every fruit and vegetable in anv part of the world. country club on an illuminated white way. A superb boulevard will be built along the waters edge around most of the city. _ There are two fine hotels of which the handsomest is the Casa Marina, a huge hostelry of solid concrete built in Moorish architecture. On any street in Key West you can look opt and see the ocean. The dimensions of Key West island are aboat three by seven miles. But the area of its contribu tory country is being extended by hundreds of thousands of acreß, as new islands are reached by the auto road. The climate is wonderfully fine both in winter and summer. Frost has not been known in Key West in 48 years and probably has never occured. Both passenger steamers and car ferries which carry 26 loaded freight cars on a trip, run ’ daily between Key West and Havana, and are maintained by the Flagler interests. The fishing industry and tobacco industries are important. There is a live chamber of commerce to answer inquiries. The citizens of Key West expect the city will have 100,000 population within the next decade. It is expected it will take 2% years to bridge the deep water gaps. When the highway is opened there will be a grand motorcade from all parts of the United States to Key West for it will be one of the greatest road building engin eering feats is America. j