Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Sept. 5, 1923, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO .PENNY COLUMN i Singer Sewing Machine. Phone &OR. 5-3 t-p. Two Nice Rooms For Rent to Couple without children. 257 W. Depot St. E. D. Baker. 4-st-p. Miss Adah Craven Is in “Mothers’ Home I Life Magazine Contest’’ fo.r trip west. Club offers at attractive rates. Any patronage appreciated. Phone 37. 4-st-p, For Sale—Registered Angns-Aberdeen bull and seven-year old horse. See M. A. Blackwelder, Concord Route (i. 4-Ct-p. New Gin For Concord. Look For Our announcement in this issue. 4-3 t-c. Central. Give Me 802. the Headquarters for Goodyear tires and Willard bat teries. 3-3 t-c. We Need An Industrious. Reputable Li lly or gentleman to represent the gen uine .1. R. Watkins Products in Con cord. A few good territories also op en in other nearby cities. The nation ally advertised Watkins Products have been known and used since 1868. Don't accept any other offer until you get our proposition—it’s different. Pull particulars and samples are free. Write today. .1. R. Watkins Co.. Dept. 92, New York, X. Y. ‘ 2-9-10-23-30-p Phone 802 Southern Motor Sendee Co. Ghodyear tires, Willard batteries. 3-dt-c.. Our Friends Are Notified That We Must charge 5 cents a line for notices of entertainments, box suppers, etc., where an admission fee is charged or anything is sold. 30-tf.p. Wanted—Students to Work in Office while taking business course. Tuition paid from guaranteed position after graduation. Edwards Business Col lege- High Point, N. C. 11-25 t-p. Mortgage Trust Deeds, 5 Cents Each at Times-Tribune Office. ■ ■ ■ —— | Leavened Bread May Be Made From Materials'! Other Than Wheat and Rye j | r _ By C. L. ALSBERG, in Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry. “Since agriculture and food manufacture are essentially forms of ap- j plied biochemistry, physical chemistry has made possible great advances of immediate practical usefulness. Without physical chemistry our pres ent-day conceptions of the equilibria that prevail in soils and in the soil i solution would be impossible. “An increase in our knowledge of the behavior of colloids and of emulsions is destined to influence profoundly the world’s methods of food production. For example, wheat owes its pre-eminence as a bread grain j in large measure to the fact that it contains a mixture of proteins known ! as gluten, which, when mixed with water, forms a tenacious, elastic mass, j For this reason wheat and, to a less degree, rye, alone of all the grains I' yield dough. “Because of the physical qualities of gluten—its toughness, its dis- I tensibility and its coagulability by heat —it is possible to produce leavened j bread. These qualities of gluten do not depend primarily upon the ar- , rangement of the atoms in the molecule but rather upon, the physical con- j dition of molecular aggregates. j a lt is not too much to hope that physico-chemical research upon col loids will one day enable us to control the colloidal state to such an extent i that we can give to a colloid essentially those physico-chemical properties I that we desire. If this can be done, and there is no inherent impossibility ! in the idea, it may be possible to give to other proteins beside gluten the ! physico-chemical properties of gluten. j “When that time comes, leavened bread will be produced from mate- | rials or grain other than wheat and rye. What this would mean to the ; food supply and the future of the race is obvious.” This Blouse is as Indispensable to a Railroad Journey as the n Ticket / m If one were doing one of those psychological word reflex tests the 1 association of ideas in this weather * m Would be—Traveling—Suits—Blouse —and almost all the little scholars Iwould get a hundred. ! Although of late years a dress and '* coat have become perfectly good form for traveling, most women still kave an inherent conviction that the I costume for a train is a suit and ' | naturally, the accompanying blouse. ;If the joarifty is only to last for a 'aingle day a white silk blouse is al- ‘ , ways fresh and charming. In case the trip is one on which one must look at oneself and be seen by others for several days at a time, a crepe i blouse of darker color is advisable. The pictured Crepe de Chine blouse, ijust tent by M. Henri Creange, the fashion leader! from Paris, is emi- I ■ently suited for faring afar as it I ,has no trimming that will soil and no •ccordian pleats to wilt in the heat Two oval mother-of-pearl buttons arc its only fastening. They button la a new manner through a frill Which Extends the length of the blouse. Horizontal shirrings at the right side Mu the low waistline—and similar shirrings hold in the sleeves above a fia-ing cuff. Unless you belong to the conserra party this blouse is most effective a color Amt contract* wkh Ac Tribune Member of Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all new# credits* to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local All rights of republication Os special dispatches herein are also reserved. li.-Lv.A.-.-a . i ' Fresh Porcelain and VVhitHiou.se Flour. “We think it the best.” Dove-Bost Co. 5-lt-p. Fresh Pillsbury Pancake anil Buckwheat flakes. Post bran, bean flakes, it’s heal thy. Dove-Bost Co. 5-lt-p. Old Machines Taken Fcr Part Pay In exchange for now Singer Machines, l’hone 550 R. H. D. Carpenter. Man. Woman Wanted. Salary 575 Week ly full time, $1.50 an hour spare time, selling guaranteed hosiery to wearer. Cottons, heathers, silks. Guaranteed Mills, Norristown, Pa. 4-12-p. If Its Tires or Accessories Phone 802. 3-3 t-c. Sewing Machine Repair Work Guaran teed. Phone 550 R. 5-3 t-p. Willard. Willard. Willard, the Only battery. Phone 802, 3-3 t-c. For Rent—Six Rqom House on North Church St. Calk 347 or 4SW. 3-6 t-p. ■ For Rent—Five Room House on Meadow street. Call 328 R. 4-ts. Phone 802, Southern Motor Service Co., Quint Smith building. 3-3 t-e. For Rent—One Five and One Six Room bungalow, new. Light and water con nections. Daw Phone 89, Night phone GB2J. 8-ts. If You Want Goodyear Tires We Have ’em. Phone 802. 3-3 t-c. Land Deeds and Mortgage Trust Deeds. | 5 cents each, at, Times and Tribune Office. ' I Am Now in a Position to Take up My ; work again in Concord. Painting and paper hanging. W. A. Kendrick. Tele phone 754 R. 22-ts. Adding .Machine Paper, 20 Cents a Roll, 3 for 50 cents, at Times-Trib une Office. I I KFIWI Hn eli THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE STANDING OF THE CLUBS. South Atlantic League, Team Woiw Lost PC. Macon 35* 28 .586 Charlotte .. ...35 29 .547 Greenville 31 *29 .517 Augusta 29 28 .500 Simrtanburg 31 30 .508 Gastonia 31 30 .508 Results Yesterday. Greenville 1-2: Charlotte 3-1. Gastonia 4-4; Augusta 8-1. Spartanburg 3; Macon 4. American League. Team Won Lost PC. New York 82 43 .656 Cleveland 69 56 .552 Detroit 64 58 .525 St. Louis 63 <M) .512 Washington 60 <>6 .476 Chicago .. .. .56 57 .455 Philadelphia 52 71 .423 Boston 48 73 .396 Results Yesterday. St. Lmis 2; Cleveland 6. . New York 2: Philadelphia 0. Washington 3: Boston 1. Chicago 2: Detroit 5. National League. Team Won Lost PC. New York 82 50 .621 Cincinnati ...76 51 .598 Pittsburgh .. .. ......74 53 .583 Chicago 71 59 .546 St. I-ouis .. .. 65 65 .500 Brooklyn ~\ .. .. ....60 60 .476 Boston 43 85 .336 Philadelphia :42 84 .333 Results Yesterday. St. Louis 2: Chicago 3. Cincinnati 2: Pittsburgh 1. Boston 0; New York 3. Others not scheduled. Piedmont League. Team Won Lost I*C. I Danville 31 20 .<#lß Raleigh 28 23 .549 [Greensboro '. . ..27 27 .->OO Winston-Salem 24 28 .462 j High Point 24 28 .402 | Durham 24 28 .462 Durham 22 31 .415 Results Yesterday. Danville 1 : Greensboro 2. Raleigh 4; Durham 0 (5 innings, rain) Winston-Salem 2; High Point 8. Macon. Ga.. Dentist. Court Official and ! Salesman Arrested on Flogging Charge. Macon. Ga.. Sept. 4.—Dr. C. A. Yar , breugh. a dentist, and .T, E. Patrick, a I court official, were arrested today eharg ;ed with assault and battery and rioting j in connection with recent flogging activi ties in Macon. Dr. Yarbrough, the pa lie* said. is a ranking official in the local i Ku Klux Klan. and he has been charg -led with holding the position of "the whipping boss of Macon." i W. F. Delmar, a salesman, was ar rested tonight on warrants based on the 'same evidence as that in the eases of ; Yarbrough and Patrick. ) Dr. Yarbrough, the police said, is known to have been associated with .1. ! p. Dttrkee. Said to be the organizer of ■ the klan in Macon. Durkee used Dr. Yarbrough's office to hold classes of in struction to klan candidates who wished to become "naturalized.’’ | The three men refused to discuss the {case after a conference with friends. The j police declared other arrests are expect ed momentarily and before the matter is I closed they indicated that several other 'arrests of prominent persons will be I made. i Dr. Yarbrough was released on $5,009 | bond shortly after his arrest, but Patrick iand Delmar. early tonight were not able Jto make bond. i >lr. Lippard Named Chief Marshal- I Stanly News-Herald. I Mr. I). S. Lippard. of Millingport, one of Stanly's most progressive -and alert young business men. has been I named to represent Staifly County as I chief marshal at the Concord Fair which is to he held this fall- Mr. Lippard has appointed as assistants County Supt. of [schools. C-. A. Reap: Farm Demonstra | tiou Agent. Oscar Phillips : and Home I llemcnstration Agent. Miss Marjorie | Holmes. Mr. Lippard hopes to be ablj> to arrange for ,t regular Stanly County 1 Day during the Cabarrus Fair, which shows promise of being one of the big gest county fairs to be pulled off in the state this fall. 4.500 in Gastonia Schools. Gastonia. Sept. s.—Enrollment in the Gastonia public schools, reaches 4,->OO this year. With the new high/school building, now nearly completed, the pub lic school plants of the city are valued at approximately $2,000,000. on which there is bonded indebtedness of about $750,000. An Italian is creating a sensation in Rome by treating a donkey as a boon companion. He has even taken it t° a restaurant to dine with him. The lucky animal enjoyed four cocktails, two por tions of asparagus. some “fruity” cheese, and several apples ■><! g»tt kMW | Buy Your School j j Books Now and j Avoid the Rush | I We have the most com- || | plete line of School Supplies | ever carried in Concord and | are ready to supply all your school wants at the lowest possible cost. Musette, >» iP. S—All School Books are H sold for Cash. !»'. - 11 North Carolina’s One Hundred Million Dollar Road Program By Charles Up ham, State Highway Engi neer. . « North Carolina is now engaged in con struction of one of the finest road sys tems in the Cnited States. Two thous and miles of highway, half of which is concrete or asphalt surface, are now un der contract and $100,000,000 represent ing combined State, County, and Federal aid funds are authorized for immediate construction work. Indications are that this amound of money will be'augmented within the next few years. Business interests, fanners, and motor car owners throughout the State are al ready beginning to feel the benefits of these better transportation facilities. The unusually large numbers of visitiug motorists seen along the main highways at the hotels, inns, and various tourists’ camps indicate that North Carolina is fast becoming a mecca for pleasure seek ers. investors and business operators from practically all parts of the country, especially the eastern states. The numerous historical points of the Coastal Plain secticm, together with the industrial and highly developed area of the Piedmont district and wealth of its mountainous section, all providing many resorts attractive for both summer and winter recreation, represent a State that now. through its highways, is affording the people opportunities for both busi- PAY AS-YOI -PAVE” IS NEW ROAD IDEA Reads as Good. at Half Price. Said to Be the Result. That roads should he paid for by the people who use* them and not posterity: and that it is cheaper to pay for roads now than in the future, are the guilding Scions in the scheme now being tried* in San Diego county, California. This county has agreed, through its board of supervisors, t<> construct ten 1 miles of highway. 20 feet wide, paved with concrete, under the ”pay-as-you-] pave” plan. Thirty mi Vs are to be | built. Past experiment is paved high-j way construction in this county have I shown that such roads can be built on I n cash basis for $25,000 a mile, as com-J pared with $.">1,275 a mile ultimate cost! unde* the forty-year- perNcent.. bond i issue plan usually adopted for road build ing financing in the Western States, Paliforuin included. The plan wu*? invented after three Years' study of road building by George Heston, treasurer of the county. Since irs adoption, at the first of the year, one j road, the Poway grade highway, has been completed unter it. anr the‘plan found to! work out exactly as predicted. The plan is based on the conclusion that it is better business to increase.l the tax rate for the purpose of obtain-1 ing funds for highway building than to increase the rate for interest on a pav ing bond issue, since the ultimate cost) »f the improvement under the increased j rax rate will he approximately one-half >f that under the bond issue. This tax rate also takes cave of the maintenance > ~ ■ ——— ll ‘ " "—*—— s “STANDARD" /r The "Balanced Gasoline v > ■•nil i ■ i > •*V ’K/.’ -&rS mßfi&ikLizkb** L j _ aSEtey J/Sr,m7lS\ 14 AVk| I au-jmmgM V*:V~U .V if » -1 ness and pleasure. Travel through the mountains over new roads constructed on light grades, ' and often following the same locations of early roJd pioneers, afford the tourist choice bits of scenic grandeur. Western North Carolina lias thp highest [leaks east of the Rookies. Views of the ex tended valleys covered with , evergreen trees and coursed with shining'rivers are only suggestions of the ever changing panoramas seen from the roadp high on the mountains, and many times chiseled into the cliffs. The thriving industrial cities of the Piedmont section are separated by agri ,cultural districts where cotton and to bacco fields seem to be endless. A trip to the ocean through the agri cultural and wooded section of the east ern Coastal Plain ouly calls to miml the diversified attractions of the State. Fish ing and hunting abound and are easily accessible from the many pleasure resorts and colonies. North Carolina’s mineral resources, industrial centers, agricultural areas, summer am! winter resorts, timber tracts, great peach orchard*, fisheries, ami other undeveloped possibilities are now being brought closer together and made avail able by the completion of its adequate State highway system. of the highways when they are paved; . the bond issue does not dtp this. The Heston plan releases future generations 1 from the burden of paying for bonds Jlic receipts from which were used for ' j building roads which b.v jthe time the ! bonds are paid have been worn out and 1 ) rebuilt, myt once, but in all probability : j two or three times. v I improving C harlot te-Statcsville High way. ' Charlotte, opt. 4- —Hardsurfacing of the Charlotte-Statesville highway is ex ; ported to be completed within a few j days. Only a few small links between | Huntersville and Davidson remain to jbe paved before the road will be open from one end to the other. ! ! Starting life in a [joorhou.se, an Kng i lish girl has just trfken her B. A. degree at Birmingham University, GLAD SISTER ESCAPE!) OPERATION "Physicians had given my sister up jto die: they wanted to operate for gall stones, but she was too weak and could I only talk in whispers. I got her a bot- I tie of Mayr's Wonderful Remedy and in 3 weeks she was able to get about and I walked a mile to church.” It is a | simple, harmless preparation'; that re j moves the catarrhal mucus from the in | testinal trod and allays the iuflamma i tion which causes practically all stom | a eli. liver and intestinal ailments, in ! eluding appendicitis. One dose will con - | vince or money refunded. Gibson Drug Store and druggists everywhere. . :i—r 1. Positive, instant starting 2. Quick, snappy pick-ups 3* Smooth, even power flow at all speeds—high or low 4. Clean burning for low carbon 5. Long mileage for economy 6. Ample power for the hills 7. Uniform quality for uniform satisfaction. i No gasoline can give you any more and there is no other so convenient to obtain when you need it as “Standard”. The price is right. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (New Jersey) I Mid' jo TV CwoUius OPENING OF JAMES WILLiAM CANNON MEMORIAL BUILDING .YU People of Concord and Cabarrus Are Cordially Invited to tlie Exercises. I hereby extend a hearty, invitation to the people of Coneord and Cabarrus to join u» in the pleasures of the meeting at the Jackson Training Sehool, when the official opening and dedicatory exer cises of the James William Cannon Me morial Building takes place. It was not practicable to send out special invita tions locaUy, and Bence this general invi tation. The campus will be opeu to vis itors at 2 p. m. on the 11th, and they are welcome to the privileges of the in stitution. The exercises will begin at 3 o’clock when the programme as previously pub lished in The Tribune will be carried out. CHAS. E. ROGER, Supt. Death of Mr. E. D. Hunter. Mr. .K. Daniel Hunter died Tuesday afternoon at about 5 o'clock at his home on St. Mary street, after an illness of severity weeks with a cancer. Mr. Hun ter was 74 years of age, and leaves the following children: Mr. Harry Hunter, Mr. Robert W. Hunter, and Mr. I). Tay lor Hunter, and Mrs. Ed. Overcash, and Miss Mary plpnter. and one brother. Mr. C. J. Hunter, of Pipe Bluff, Ark., and oue sister, Mrs. C. I). Lentz, of Texar- Here’s a bird almost every- Andhe says as he wags his “These Bobs are the _ candy— Theit mint flavor’s dandy!” For a parrot he isn’t SO green. IF you like a mint flavor, you will love Bobs. They are the mintiest mint gum you ever tasted. Made for you by FUSER, Philadelphia * BOBSl^lll^^fr FROSTED —v CHEWING GUH^QmXJ Uhe Mint jest of Jkem 01l \ y^Ts ■■ ■■■■ -adiniii.ni.ni.Uiivi.il , ~n Wednesday, Sept. 5, 1923. kana, Texas. . . "Nv V The funeral services will be held xhis afternoon at four o'clock, from McKin non Presbyterian church, of which Mr. Hunter was a member, conducted by Kov. C. C. Myers, assisted by Rev. A. I). Shelton, of the Methodist Protestant Church and interment will take place in Oakwood cemetery. Mr. Hunter was n good citizen, promi nent with a large circle,of friends who will regret to learn of his death. . , ttt. Louis has over 3,300 factories with The first carog of anthratice caal was an annual pay roll of .$135,000,000. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION Bcll-ans A Hot water fy Sure Relief Bcll-ans 25 1 and 75* Packages Everywhere 4| L , ‘lilraWrl’ 1 ■ VN IJiS! \\ I x ' it I * jSL JjmmgM ML
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Sept. 5, 1923, edition 1
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