PAGE EIGHT p, . w There was a time when you were told to “See America First”. It is jjo longer Every state • yiMuamlc and Solid Tuts - RubM. Fonwat - Canvw Footer -KubtoH»fcMrfS«fc».|Uttei SpccivlUe. RITCHIE Hardware Company “YOUR HARDWARE STORE” 30 S. Union St. Phone 117 f Synthetic Feed Predicted. „ A cheap synthetic meat is predict -cl by Dr. David Wesson, of New • York. He says he has pro duced a synthetic hash built around a base of cottonseed meal. So far. as he is concerned it is indistinguish able from real beef hash. This arti ficial product can be produced at only a fraction of the cuet of real meat. "Cotton." asserted Dr. Wesson, “is a food crop of high rank. Since 187 S, when the chemists entered the field of cotton and cotton products, one improvement after another has takeii place in the refining of cotton seed oil and the preparation of edi ble fats until there is but a small field left in this country for the oil i-of the olive, while 1 We 'lard • ofi the beg- has been equaled if not surpass ed by the various excellent cooking fats now on the market made entire ly from the once despised cottonseed. Without the oil of the cottonseed there would not be enough cooking fats to go around with our constant ly increasing population. “During the years of development which have brought cottonseed oil etui its products to their -.-cent high HANES show you how much more your dollar can buy It will buy store does days you’ll be and y. nec j c comfortable in Hanes. styles, in fine checks and in It doesn’t cling to you. fancy madras patterns. Made There’s plenty of room in it for the boys too, sizes 24 to 34 so that the air can get to your for boys from 6to 16 years. skin and keep your body dry. D cp, _ There’s no skimping of ma- *? AD This Guarantee: terial when we make under- " 1e suarantce Hanes Under vear wear absolutely every - Your Hanes dollar buys thread, stitch and button. fVe you more wear too. Moretrips guarantee to return your to the laundry—because we **ney nr give you a new gar use the best kind of material ment l > stam breaks. and make the garments just P. H. Hanes Knitting Co. as well as we know how. But- Winston-Salem, N. C. ton annoyances are gone too New York office „ Worth Street —Hanes buttons are really colluse combination - Young sewed on tight. men everywhere are enthusiastic Ask to see Hanes Athletic over the new Hanes College Underwear at your regular Combination—flat-knit prib-orer _ v ,>ii l .. i* shirt and nainsook drawers. Un store. You 11 know it by the equalled value at 75 cent* the famous red labeL If your garment. 1 3 S Here’s an armhole There's double strength. This button that can’t curl or double elasticity in the refuses la rip—Jorge, roomy HANtai vebhingbelt. Ids come of. It’S and frtclton-free. turn-thread instead of sewed to the Z single. Sewed especially ~m m Four Taik about com- to prevent rips auditors. thicknesses Q fort! The Hani* , ~nt. r inl closed crotch stays A V material /f dosed ' Its cut eind instead of IF /\\ stitched i. a,pedal d wide, full-length knee the usual way to insure that won’t crtsp.up yager, two, .K o r pfj comfort. leg—won’t Ml! patch! UJ state of perfection, very little atten tion has been given to the meal, which the seed carries in greater quantity than the oil. Analysis of the cottonseed indicates considerable protein, so that it is possible after removing the oil and other products to obtain a substance containing about 55 per cent of protein- This wou'd make a good meat substitute. With cottonseed meal costing .SSO a ton and carrying 50 per cent of pro tein we can get 1000 pounds of pro teiu for SSO, or at a cost of about five cents a pound, Beofsteak which contains 20 per cent of protein ♦'.ls for 40 cents a pound„'So we are pay ing $2 a pound for the protein. Synthetic beefsteak is almost with in the reach of the chemist.'* Mrs. Kliott-Lynn is the first Eng lish woman aviator to fly commer cially. Under rhe rules of interna tional law she is not allowed to take paying passengers, so for the present her work will be confined to carry ing merchandise. Queen Anne, bf England, was a notable patron of the turf and at one time openly raced her own horses. TRAFFIC AND POLICING PROBLEMS AT RACKS Four Companies of National Guarda men Wifi Be on Duty at Clm lotte. Charlotte, N. C., May 3.—With four companies of national guardsmen on duty, aided by nearly two score civilian officers, indications are that traffic and policing problems will be handled with more easy and efficiency at the 250-mile national championship race May 10th at the Charlotte speed way than at any past event. Capt. Paul R. Younts, of Head quarters and Service Co., 106th En gineers, will be in supreme command of traffic and policing forces. He will be assisted by Capt. Ed. C. Boyette, Jr., Co. F. 120th Infantry. Other companies that will participate are Gastonia Howitzer Co., 120th Infant ry, under command of Capt. Stephen A. Dolly and Co. A. 105th Engineers, of North Wilkesboro, under Capt. R. R. Reins. Promptly at 7 a. w. May 10 mem bers of the four companies will en truck at the Armory and go to the speedway. Capt. Younts will estab lish headquarters at the watchman's tower. This will be the nerve center j of the organization of almost 400 men although Captain Younts and Captain j Boyette will make frequent tours of! the field via motorcycle sidecar. Here' will also be the switchboard of the independent telephone system owned by the Military company. More than 20 miles of wire will be utilize,! in establishing connections between stra tegic points. Southern Railway guards and a mil itiaman will be on duty at all grade | crossings between Charlotte and the speedway and guardsmen will be sta tioned at all road intersections and at intervals along the highways. More than a score of rural )>olieemen under Chief Vic Fesperman will patrol the county roads and city officers will split traffic in Charlotte in order to prevent undue congestion over any! one-way thoroughfare. The Pineville road will be a one- ■ way thoroughfare from Charlotte to the speedway the day of the race, i Traffic will be halted at Pineville and ’ Charlotte-bound ears will proceed over the Park road, while machines cu i route to the speedway wii! follow the j Pinciille road. After the race machines leaving j Tunnel No. 1 will proceed over the | Pineville road to Charlotte while tars starting front Tunnel No. 2 at the I end of Grandstand A will sre over the j Park Road. j If motorists will follow the j signs posted along the varous routes." ! i said Captain Younts, “traffic will he 1 I greatly expedited. Cars .with oecu-1 I pants hound for Grandstand A will ; i form in the line on the extreme 'eft j | s.de of the road. The line for infield-1 ! bound cars is in the ceuter and for J Grandstand B on the extr-.me right. | ‘ There is plenty of parking rpeco I for every automobile ius’d > the grounds and it will not ho necessary for any motorist to leave his machine in parking spaces operated for profit jor along the roadside far from the j speedway. Space between the track land the grounds will be staked off for! ! gratis parking space and guardsmen i | will be on duty directing parking i watching over the machines. | "Many fans are under the : mpres j [ sion that the Park road route is ; much longer than the Pineville ltigh | way. The difference is only about ! j two miles and ears using the Park j 1 road will avoid the crush that is} | found on the Pineville road because motorists are more familiar with the! 1 latter. Motorists desiring to leave j j Charlotte via the Park road should proceed out South Boulevard to East | I Boulevard, down this thoroughfare to| j Avondale avenue and then turn to the j ; right. Burbank Laid to Rest. | The Pathfinder. Just as the sun dipped into the! western horizon Luther Burbank was! interred under a cedar tree of his own planting in a corner of the gar den at Santa Rosa, Calif, which Ini loved so well. Judge Ben Lindsey, of Denver, who gave the eulogy, said: “His was a real religion that ac tually works for human betterment! —a religion that dares to challenge the superstition, hypocrisy and sham that so often work cruelties, inqui sitions. wars and massacres. It is impossible to estimate the wealth he '.tas created that has been given gen erously to the world. Unlike in ventors, or workers in otlier fields, no patent rights were given him. nor did he seek a monopoly in what he did. ! Had that been the ease Luther Bttr- Iwnk would have been the world's richest man. As it is, the world hat; been richer because of him and in this he found a joy and satisfaction that , no millions of money could give him. ! “Luther Burbank lives -forever in ! the myriad fields of strengthened grain, in the new forms of fruits and j flowers and plants and vines and trees i and above all, in the newly watered I gardens of the human mind whence shall spring human -freedom from those earthly fields that shall drive out gods false and brutal.” Since Burbank's passing away many are the stories related about him. Once he begged newspaper? men not to call him a "plant wizard” because, as he explained, he did noli attempt to improve on nature but as sisted in bringing about natural trans formations. His mother, now dead, used to say that in pain or grief Bur bank would be consoled by the sight of a flower. Henry Ford is one of those who have risen to defend the great horticulturist'a religious vibwy. 1 rieuds liken Burbank and bis love for children to Abou Ben Adfcein of I the poem, who, though au unbeliever, was saved because of his great love for his fellow men. Burbank's will leaves an estate of *900,006 to his young widow, whom he married in 1916. With star. athletes entered from Sweden, Germany, Italy and other European countries, the National A. A. A. truck and field championships a,t Philadelphia jx>. July «will. take on a truly infcruatmimi ijaaor. A loose, clammy handshake leave* rHb CONCXMiD DAILY I’RIBUNfc Sitting pretty and no mistake/ (tt jom LIKE the chap in the song, I’m sitting Prince Albert is friendly in spirit and on top of the world. And it’s not a friendly in fact. It never bites my tongue \ bad world when you look at it from all or parches my throat. They tell me the - sides. '-Pve hit some rough spots, but Prince Albert process fixed that for me managed to keep my seat. I want to let and millions like me. I only know that rA _ h notywbere in tut* nd it be known that the road has been a P. A. is cool and satisfying as spring- ZZomZ* heap smoother since I discovered Prince water on a hot afternoon and that it suits . n » T - . 1 • re ~ removed by the Prmce Albert process* Albert. Here ts tobacco! me to aT. My old jimmy-pipe and Prince Albert You’re welcome to this leaf out of my and Igo along just singin’ a song from book. If you’re not smoking P. A., morning to midnight. Whenever I get you’re not getting full enjoyment out of to feeling low, I take out my pipe, tamp your pipe. Just get yourself a tidy red a load of good old P. A. into the muzzle tin of Prince Albert. Load up your old and light up. Old Man Trouble takes jimmy-pipe and light up. Nothing com- French leave the minute that wonderful plicated about that, is there? Well, that’s Mmmr J« smoke starts up the stem. my formula. It always works for me. MMm fIHHf Prince albert SB —wo other tobacco is like it! q mu i. iurtfiTfip Wfflpsoy, WtMum-Satea. N. C. Newest Weapon of Chicago’s Gangland i gj| > «''*# UPr - Jill ’WJftjftSMwtp ,M V —"*— ■ i at.ii YuTtf' ■ * .JiSpSuf mmmmln • This shows the Thompson submachine gun, latest ond deadliest weapon to be adopted by Chicago's gang sters. It weighs nine pounds and fires 100 shots in six seconds. Inset shows Alex Foreek, Chicago’s hardware dealer, who admits gelling the weapon with which imlive believe Assistant State's Attorney William M. Mc- Bwiggen was shot to death. j THE LORDS OF CREATION Charity and Children. At the recent session of the Gran ville Presbytery, held in Smithfield. a resolution was voted down addressed to the General Assembly asking it to give -its approval -to leiders of wom en’s work in the'ohueeir -to present reports of their and the re sults «f the congregations when in vited to do so. At the same Pres bytery another resolution was passed admitting a young n1*«1 to the min is try w%o Jiad noitMr -rottege my seminary training. Pt- ticaulou. pas ter of t!io First Presbyterian Church or Durham. advocated .the firkt resolution and as stropgly op posed the Inst. He was defeated in both eases. According to Dr. Scan lon, this action puts a premium on tin; ignorance of men aud a prohibi tion on the intelligence of woineu. "Women.” skid 'tbie Dui'.iam preach er, “have made more progress in tip. past ten years than the men since the Civil. War, despite which a ban \is continued to prevent them from I making reports of their activities.” i'this partiality to the men of the cljuick is not in accord with the spirit of the times and the local church of which Dr. Scanlon as pastor may withdraw from the Granville Presby tery and ask to be re-admitted to the • oid Orange Presbytery as a result of ■ this vote. The Presbyterians are a 1 little too rigid with respect to their.) women. In this new day in which we are -living the women have come into their own. The enforced »i- ' lence of the sisters who are doing ‘ the largest share of the work of the J church, is an injustice which they I -will not tolerate much longer. In I moot other denominations they have* already bfohen over, and the heads 1 of the vflriouK ilepartmeiitk of the ae tivitieK of the chureh, are Ueuiauding their right ,to be heard. The rule which will not allow women to make report,, of their activities, but which coinitels than to hand these reports over to a man to read to the congre gation is entirely unjust. Dr. Scan lon is ri|bt. The Durham Horald. commenting on the situation, says: "It is a position thgt strongly re sembles a poultry yard. The hen lays the eggs, scratches food for the biddies, and does the loudest cackling and perching on the top of the fence "'acre ail may sec aiid hear, cock-a do, idles so that the world may hear and be made to think be in the one who is doing all the work in the yard." The I‘resbyterian rooster* must come down off the fence and allow the bens to do some cackling of their own. The wonder is that the women of the i-hnrch have pa tiently endured' the silence to which riey have been subjected for so long. | TO 4. „ - r -~ New refrigerators J for old ice-boxes* That’s what thousands of families are get ting when they change their ice-boxes into electric refrigerators by installing the Fria ida ire mechanical unit in the ice chamber. They are getting perfect refrigeration with out care or work. Cenwert your own ice-box, .or select one of the new metal cabinet Frjgidaiws. Buy on tite GMAC payment plan. I N. C. ; . .» ' ' • ; , 6, 1026 The birthdays of Chauueey M. De pew have conic to be almost national events. The grand old statesman, cap italist and orator has achieved an old age record in spite of h : s very active life and exciting career, hnd every time he reaches another extended milestone in the journey there is a wide celebration. As usual the old fellow had a few good things to say us he paused from his work as ehair tuan of the board of directors of the New York Central to comment on his !)2nd birthday, "Think about cheer ful things," he advised. ”Be an op t:mist; don’t brood or be morbid: do not be angry nr hate things: be mod erate in all tilings.” He said the fu* , ture looked very good to him ; he pects t(N see the world improve still ■ further in many ways. He admitted that he had “out out” ml meat, tea and coffee long ago—and that he nev er drank hard liquor. Flowers, tele grams and hitters of congratulations swmaped the nonagenarian.