Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Dec. 3, 1923, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE SIX Out, Belows » 1 This shows 300 planes of the Italian forces drawn up awaiting in •nection by Premier Mussolini. Italy’s air force is growing. . y - 1 • BllS MME. CEOLA 4 PALMIST AND CLAIRVOYANT Tells Past Present and Future—Does Not Ask This lady has used her wonderful gifts since iaS ;H*Jh ’hihlhood. She astonished and helped thousands gSIjORjSL fIES )f people in every walk of life. She can help you, ao matter who or what you are. Xo matter what tour hope, soar or trouble is. come to see this great 23iSuRkBB£91fi!8 woman and have your mind put at ease. SHE TAKES AWAY ALL EVIL INFLUENCE Tells you how to have success in business, love, marriage, divorce, “I lawsuits and speculations of all kinds. Special Price For Wliite or Colored. Reading Strictly Confidential At King Tut Service Station, National Highway (■HVVM VISIT THE SCIENTIFIC PALMIST | MADAME ALLEN {V'S&rl " " 1110 ,in happy. discouraged, unsuccessful in doubt, or tro,l^< ‘> Ihis wonderful palmisli can positively change your ■k condition, many who were on the brink of uncertainty, to day are resting easily in the lap of luxury by acting on TO THOSE UNHAPPY AND DISCONTENTED—if you are separai-ed from the one you love or in trouble from any cause consult her NOW. Would you like to mar ry quickly? Have you any trouble overany affair in life? Do you want more success? Ifso you need her advice, she not only tells you of your troubles but how to overcome them. Xo question asked, she will teN you all. There is no home so dreary and sad, no life so wicked or blighted, no heart so sad and lonely, no condition or circum stance so complicated or incomprehensible that can’t be set right and kept right after a,visit to Kef. common, sense says go and partake of these advantages ifter yearsiyoO, will be spared the saddest of wprdS “It might been." Privets room for colored people. Office Hours: 10 a. m. to !) :30 p. m. 22 West Depot Street. Dusenbery House I made it myself ” You acknowledge, modestly, a compliment on your cooking, but of course you feel proud. And who wouldn’t? It’s a real accomplishment to be a good cook. And cooks are not born—they’re made. When you entertain, you pay your guests the highest hor\or by serving something you’ve made yourself. And now at Christmas, the entertaining season, plan to Make Christmas Goodies at Home Get our the “sugar and spice and all things nice.” Home cooked dainties are more wholesome and nourishing. Make your own mince pies, gingerbread men and cookie stars for the tree, candy for the stockings. And don’t forget the little neigh borly gifts— a jar of hermits, a fine loaf of nut bread, or some of this rich, delicious Christmas cake. They are made at home and gas for cock ing will help you suc ceed with every recipe. Concord & Kannapolis Gas Co. , #f-rnriifri ii ii ■ -mi jj, CHRISTMAS CAKE % cup shortening 1 cup sugar % cup strong coffee 1% cups sifted flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 3 egg whites 94 cup chopped walnut meats % teaspoon each cloves, mace, cinnamon and allspice. Cream shortening, add sugar, and cream again. ■ Add coffee, sifted dry ingredients and nuts; mix well. Beat egg whites stiff and fold into mixture. Bake in moderate oven (326’) in loaf or round pan one hour. ■ Sure, Everybody Tipped!! A fellow wouldn’t mind digging down in his jeans for‘an extra dime when he paid for his shine if ail bootblacks were like the new ones they have in Seattle. They are pretty girls—co-eds at the University of Washington. And they nre earning money for welfare work. Many an old grad returned to the campus to get an extra gloss on his shoes. The first on the stand is Chief of Police William B. Severyns of Seattle, whose shoes Veidn Morrow is prettying tip. And next to his is Lieut. Gov. William ,T. Coyle. What the World Is c .Doin& CAS SEEN BY (POPULAR cMAGAZINE S-J "Canned Sunshine” for Heat to Aid Fuel Problem “Canned sunshine” for heating pur poses is the objpet of experiments being conducted by a Pacific-coast inventor. He has developed heat from sunlight that will burn coal, melt lead, and generate a gas which he believes can be utilized for propelling power. This is accomplished by a series of mirrors that reflect the rays into a concentrator which produces a temperature of 2.800 degrees. By burn ing chepaicals in this apparatus, cooling them, and t hen sealing the residue in air tight containers, the expert expects to market an energy that can be used in many ways. * * * Unique Sealer for Pie Crusts To press the dough or pie crusts to gether and prevent the escape of juice into the oven while baking, a metal marker has been made that runs around the edge of the crusts to mark the dough tnd trims the sides at the same time. t Every State Has Its Beauties v I*l ipnmnsi * • Beautiful glrU don’t come from any one state. * yhte bevy was recruited from many, aa their banners might. show. They stopped off at Washington to sea the White House whlls sn route to New York City whereAbsy, are *® participate in a huge beauty spectacle—-one to be crowned Queen of Beauty in America. fHE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE U. S. Training Pigeons to Fly at Night In teaching pigeons to fly at night, army officers claim to be developing a necessary factor in national defense and the maintenance of communications when other methods fail. A band of night fliers in the Canal Zone has been trained with remarkable success, the birds released at any point in the region, finding their way home on the darkest nights as speedily as'in daylight. Unaffected by weather conditions, the pigeons make flights through thick >w«» and heavy tropical rains to a loft having its interior illuminated by electric lights. “These birds were put to a useful pur pose recently,” said an officer, “when a small army vessel was in distress 40 miles at sea. Soon after dusk a pair of night —\\ rV'-'J'*-' \< & flying pigeons was released with messages asking for aid. In two hours, the birds were at the home loft, and relief was on its way.” Many ships and aircraft are now being, equipped with pigeons before they start upon their trips, to be used as a ™*th of communicating with their stations in the event that mishaps make wireless messages impossible to send. CONTRACTOR IS KILLED I AT HOME OF MRS. SPIKES Is Shut by Cock, of Durham, When He Attempt to Enter Residence at Ra leigh. Raleigh, Nov. 30.—A. M. Thompson, 60. contractor, of Raleigh,’ is dead and E. H. Cook, 23, of Durham, is held here in jail ns a result of a shooting which i occurred here last night ht the home of Jins. Bettie Spikes. Mro. Spikes is be-. ing detained as a material witness in the case. Following a report of the shooting.! Itoliee officials went to Mrs. Spike's resi dence where the body of Thompson wn s j found, his hand, according to police, rest-1 ing on a pistol. Cook appeared at the jail shortly therenftetr and surrendered i stating that he had killed Thompson in | self defense. According to police offi- j eials the pistol found by Thompson's body appeared not to have been fired recently, though one shell had been ex ploded. ( ook told the police, they say, that Thompson attempted to enter Mrs. Spike ri home and when he urged the older man to go away he pushed into! the bouse ami fired at him, whereupon,* he returned the fire. Thompson being l killed. Chilld Smothers in Pile of Loose Cot ton. Salisbury, Dc?. 2.—Ollin Gilmer Silliman. 10-year-old son of John D Silliman, of Mill Bridge, met a tragic death Saturday afternoon when he mothered to.death in a pile of loose cot ton. Tlic .!*,!(* triiow was playing about t the house and in some way got in the pile of cotton and smothered to dohth before his perilous condition was dis covered. The funeral was held today and interment was at Thyatiro. ' USE PENNY COLL'MNS—IT PAYS, I Useful Clamp for the Woodwork Bench I Tbe drawing shows a simple home made damp that is ©f cos siderable use-' fulness to woodworkers. It consists ol * I CLAMP JAW BLOCK END " i a wooden block, securely screwed to the benchtop in the position shown, and faced on one side with A-in. sheet iron. This forms the permanent jaw. A 2 by 4-in. lever, also faced at one end with sheet iron, and slotted at the other end as shown, is arranged to pivot on a strap hinge that is screwed to the benchtop and bolted to the lever at the point indicated. Tfce upper end of the lever forms the movable jaw. The vise is tightened by means of a 2 by 4-in. cam, attached to the bench leg with a butt binfre, the nar row part of the cam fitting in the slot of the lever and extending outward about 6 in. so that it can be operated by the foot. Forcing the cam lever downward brings the vise jaws together, clamping the work between them. If ihe object is too small to be held between the jaws, one or two small wooden bk>f ts are put between ft and the jaws. * * * {[Ships in East Prussia travel on dry land when going from Elbing, the sea port, to the lakes in the highlands. Spe cial sluices have been built along the canal connecting the sea with jhoae waterways. When a vessel has to “climb,” it is loaded on wagons run over a double track railway in the watnw Cobb Puts Clothespin on His Nose And Talks of Modern Sex Novels Special to New York World. •New No. 26.—“ Next to an i nff' f v,n “nothing gets old fashioned so fast as modern litera titre. | Whereupon he tilted back his chair, .put ho* feet upon the desk and grinned. | inere had been a discussion of those American writers who affect super-real ■ ism and a deliberate chaotic style “Personally,” said Mr. Cobb,” I don't like em. 1 know the crowd you mean. I they are so busy discovering sex and .garbage they have forgotten beauty ex *mts in the world. And thev have be *come so fascinated with the words themselves they have forgotten that words pre supposed to convey something to the inmd other than mere sound. "Take the case of Chicago, “for in stance. Chicago woke up one morning and discovered that there were a lot of ;writers there. Bang! The ‘Chicago 'School' came into being. Thev didn't seem to realize that writers are some- I "hot like skunks; get enough of ’em to gether anu you have a bad smell. "Not that I'm saying they can't write. Some of them can; but they are tloqnder ing around in n maze of words. Chicago seems to be suffering from nervous cul- Iture. Many of her writers are writing propaganda—a ml propaganda is never I art. It cant be_ And then many of the I writers confuse smut with sex. Dirty stuff : no reason for writing it. Eczema. Youths Companion. Eczema is the most common of nil skin diseases, yet it is not so common as it seems, for iteoplc, including some physicians, call almost every skin b’emish by that name. Since the mani festations of eczema are variable, may affect any part'of the body and may oc cur at any age, the praetiee is perhaps excusable. The disense is defined as a catarrhal inflammation of the skin that may be either acute or chronic nnd that occurs usually in the sealp or the face, in the crook of the elbows and knees, in the groin or wherever two surfaces of skin lie close together. The affected part is raw, for it has shed its epidermis, nnd exudes a sticky fluid that forms crusts and stiffens under clothing. Eczema begins ns an erythema, or diffuse redness of the skin, on which minute papules, or pimples, form and soon soften and fill with a serious fluid. That acute stage lasts only for a short time, and then the chronic forms follow.i The particular form that it takes de pends on what hap|>ens to the minute vesicles. They may break and exude their s*ieky fluid contents—a condition known as "weeping eczema"; the serum in the vesicles may turn to pus. nnd the vesicles break open and allow the pus to dry nnd so form crusts; or. finally the serum in the vesicles may dry up and leave little scales. If the disease lasts a long time, other changes, such ns infiltration of fluid and induration, may Cough, cough, coughing— all night long You can stop it.. That cough—it keeps you awake at night, if I breaks your rest, wastes your strength, en- /j fY‘ ff 'vj \ dangers the delicate tissues of your throat /f \ /l, t I \ and chest—break it up now. \ For more than fifty years, thousands of 1 " —■—. j families have relied upon Dr. King's New A s' Discovery to break up coughs. It does this quickly, naturally by stimulating the mucous membranes to throw off the secretions that are dogging them. Harm- Exhantting night lessly, and without any bad after-effects, it quiets the roughing ix quickly throat and lung spasms, and the irritation that is stopped with this causing the cough then promptly dears tip. It has an household . agreeable taste. All druggists. ’ tmt A Cow can give milk to her fullest capacity only when fed the right proportion or balance of milk making materials. Milk is made up of Protein, Carbohydrates, Fat, Minerals and Water, in pro portions that, practically speaking, can’t be varied. Instead of making imperfect milk, a poorly fed cow Feed Purina Cow Chow aWWIHM and your cows will get all the Dftwt|%nn Protein and Calcium needed to balance your Carbohydrate rough- All we ask is that you give Purina Cow JnSnuilffSpy ChOW a trial and let your milk scales show you why yoi should keep on feeding it. CB«3RfifiiCßfiCwC® For Sale By CASH FEED STORE South Church Street Phone 122 Monday, December 3, 1923 "The world has of sex sjnee the beginning—and it will continue to Ibe full of sex until the end of things. But there is nothing new in that —de- spite the fact that some youngster is * constantly discovering it—and shouting iiis d iscovery to the world. "Many people seem to blame this wave in literature to the war. I don’t believe the war had anything to do with it. There have been other such waves be |fore —and there will be again. But the . times usually swing back to normal, and | they're headed that way now.’ "You know, 1 regret the death of Em erson Hough, the man who wrote ‘The Covered Wagon,' and other good early- Ameriean stories. His things have n big sweep and they seem typically American to me. Much more American than all this chaotic stuff the ‘moderns’ are shout ing over. I have found no real original ity in it. Just words, j “They try so pitifully hard to be up to-the-ibinute. and it can't be done. You sit down to write a novel of today—and by the time you have finished it is a nov el of yesterday. Alrendy old-fashioned. You have to'waft until today has crystal lized into yesterday before you can de scribe it accurately." Then he brought his chair down on all four legs, grinned nnd announced: “Well, I'm going duck hunting." And lie did. take place, and then the skin mny crack. The predisposing causes of eczema are any diseases that tend to lower the tone of the system: the exciting causes are anything that irritates the skin- The most distressing subjective symp tom is itching, which sometimes alter nates with burning and tenderness to the touch. . The diet of persons who have the dis order should be carefully regulated; coffee and all salty or highly , seasoned food should be avoided. A, djet^‘consisting solely of rice, eaten with butter hjit not with sugar, and bread in moderation often seems to effect a cure in the early stages. In the acute stage the applica tion of a lotion of carbonate of zinc or an application of oxide of zinc oint ment may be used. After the disease has become chronic the treatment is much less simple and must be adapted to tin* individual case. In some cases thyroid extract has been found bene ficial. but. since that remedy will do much harm in unsuitable cases, it should be taken only under medical ad vice. It is not practicable to give general rules that would serve for all cases. More than twenty different processes are involved in the manufacture of a single needle. The world at large uses up something like seven million needles a day. Men pass to greatness through the portal of humility.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 3, 1923, edition 1
6
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