PAGE EIGHT r Most Motor Accidents on Straight Roads , Says Kropf j; ■*■'• l(§sßs> I r jjgTSgfc wSSBWBBB&Zre& > . >?5? 1 3 W : f!Ih^KJKmK ? ~ ''MBm -%Mm BRfe^'^'i' "* * ; MBpsl %*' **-~ * *iil IlsP HH ; jra§?£' * |l||l •s&S*|>a# •:::. .x*.*.-..,.. JCSk sP* }. jß&iiv' lo . *w> y v i>- * -■ j STOP / CHlCAGO—Straight roads With their fascination for the driver who “Hites to step on the k,is‘ are responsible for more automobile accidents than curves, hills or even rdilroad crossings, according to Kichr.rd E. Kropf, Supreme Re gent of the Royal Arcanum, who based hie assertion on automobile accidents tatu'.alini is the slate of ■ '* '■ J -'■' •■*-* -=-=T A WORLD-FAMOUS SIX AT $1045! Scientifically balanced, holds the road atalhpeeds. "* A. « V. !*8 ac, 4 All-steel body. One-pkce \» \X A'd 'flflpfc * windshield. Luxurious, \ -i y v— . .ffiffißJfi ; genuine leather cushions, ' . V. y/ 1 "* \ . 10 inches deep. Coal A_ »• * \ 7 lights. Standard non-skid V ‘ a>rd hrti. \ “t, | to compare with other cars at near its price V THIS is an oiler to anyone who is con sidering the purchase of a car in the SIOOO field. We invite you to take out a Studcbakcr Light-Six model for the sake of comparing, it with other cars at near its price. This without obligation to buy. Every maker advances claims for his car. Some are fair, some superlative; some are borne out by facts, others not. You’ve been toid this car, that car or another is “just as good” as this famous Studebaker model. Now find out for your self. That’s the only way to buy lasting satisfaction. -5* *?• $ .When you try this Studebaker Light-Six, you will find an engine of remarkable power I LIGHT-Sl«gC SPECIAL sjlX frIQ-friX 5-Pass. W.B, 40 H. P. 5-Pass. 119-1n.W.8. SOH.P. 7-Pasi'. 136-in. W. B. 60 H. P. Tovrfng . . . . . . $1645 Tderfn* stt*J Tourta* sl7s© "ruipi..) : till Ro * d *' e ' <**•••■>.... MOO Spcedtter (All prices f, o. b. factory. Terms to meet your convenience ) Auto Supply and Repair Co. STUDEBAKER LIGHT-SIX - $1045 Bill of Fare for the Soldiers’ tamp*. Raleigh, May B.—Aspirant soldiers of North Carolina who attend the citizen*’ military training camps this summer wilt be relieved of the burden of "kitchen police” and will enjoy, a dally menu that will almost etjual home', according- to a notice rece+ved by Major Faseual Lopez, executive officer »f the 321 Infantry of toe organized reserve. Army eubaistance experts have worked 6B&1I i Wisconstn in 1922-23, where straight roftd accidents' outhum , beret] all others more than two to one. I | ‘‘Curves, hills and railronn cross ings seem to bring out any cau i tfoW that a driver has,’' said Mr. Kropf who has studied traffic con- I ditions in connecfio.. with the I I Roy-1 Arcanum’s nation-v.ide cam ' ‘ rr±r\ ~ *'-» oreventijn of acci- and flexibility—an L-heacf engine designed and bbiFt by Studebaker; noted for its quiet and smooth operation!; free from vibration because its crankshaft and connecting rods are machined on alf Surfaces, an exclusive Studebaker feature on cars at this price. You will find surprising ease of handling, unusual comfort, roominess, obvious refine ments and all the visible signs of a quality car. You will find low price its only con trasting feature. * * * Remember, Studebaker is the world’s larg est quality oat builder and thus is in position to give you the utmost for the least. Buy no car at SSOO or more without male, ing this te3t. Don’t buy blindfolded. .young men over the country, and good number from Norfji Carolina, will at tend. The ration allowance, it wan stated, hits been incremrtd to' -15 cenis per day per man, as compared with 30 cents in the regular army for the same purpose. In addition 23 cents per man is allowed for the preparation of the food. Regular cooks will do the kitchen work with extra paid help to serve and wash pots and pans, thus saviug those |y!Ws:3s|; dent?.. “A man why would not think of pkiddin? around a sharp turn will drive his car faster than fifty miles per hour on the straight-away. In the city, the wbite-fdoved hand of the traffic ofitept prevents such reckicssness. “Cut of 2.981 road accidents in Wriehnsin ift 1922-23, 2r.044 oc curred on straight roads and- only 987 in all other plachß. inclndln© curves crossroads, hillsf. corners auij rnftrOHd onosstrtps. Reckless dri"injr is jrivon as the cause for 1998 accidents. Improper or no Hnrhts. broken m-chanism. intoxicat ed drivers, weather conditions, nar row !>rids»es and culverts and cars on the rrsne side of the marl are arnonr the other causes listed. “If, is interestine to not? that In tK<» 2.9.31 accidents', there were TO.- 2."8 peonle involved. Nearly al "raVs. *he recfdess driver fShpar dizVs the I'”es rs seve rsl of his 1 f.-milv and friends. The Royal Ar c.-fmrm is striv-fn? to tench 1 the dne trine cf rceotv in all walks es life throuc-h 1,300 councils and 12-9,000 memh-rs in the TTATtW fTtA'teS and ; Canada. The order Kas no other i motive -n this save the pnnserva- I *fob of life f hroiißh sensible, cau -1 t:oao ! : uiiiii. ’ "t ll»l^ T -T"' I mi . eludes: fresh fruit and cereal for break fast, salad and -raw vegetables for din ner, and a pint of sweet or buttermilk for each map. Mrs. Blade, of Hastings, England, has received the congratulations of King George on her lOJit birthday. She es tablished the first adult sdhaol for flah errnen. and was a Sunday school teacher for 80 years. It PASS flFT&fiSiSf COLUMN tfMfhSoNOMffi''fOtty: MMS ■ ■■ l- 11 i' -’—t' HE’S ON HIS WAY TO A NEW MARK ■ 's' , ' 1 -" , } j Babe Rutb watching one sarll &ril I the fence. If Pabc Ruth plunges along at his present rate in slamming home runs he will beat his world’s record of 59 circuit smashes hung up in 1921. He is already three weeks i ahead of his last year’s pace. Then he had collected five homers by May Is. TfifS year he had five be- I fore May 1. This pace Is a bit fast i er than the one maintained three 1 years ago. , The Rule of the Home. Dearborn Weekly, A Brooklyn judge asserts that more than eighty, iier ceut, of our criminals are under twenty-five. Another New Vorfc jurist observes' that the average hardened criminal is about seventeen, and that the age at which' the largest uum- Iters of prisoners arv committed to jails and reformatories is nineteen. This im plies a youth situatiou of alarming pro portions and implications. How can this frightful wastage of young life be accounted for? Those near est to the facts tell us that it is not the fruitage of a crime wave that inevitably follows in the wake of war. The causes go much deeper. In the final alalysis the principal iudiettnent falls upon one only institution and that institution is tin l average American home. The tap. root of tte situation is cou tempt for rightly ednstituted’ authority. A generation ago the parents governed the family. Today the tables are turned and the family policy is largely dictatrd by the children. Cfinsciiuently. before either the school or the church cun as sume any guardianship, the seeds of po tential slisortiei hart; been sown. Nothing is plainer tlfkn that education, like charity, must begin at home. The child who has ©At learned a whole some respect for home-law will have noth ing but disdain Mr scboot-lavk. The youth who has not been disciplined to re gard either will leave school around fourteen and go out to defy all law. And when he falls into the stern hands of the guardians of the law he' will have his parents"! tr thank most of all. j The remedy is not better laws of bet ter schools or bettef- churches. It is bet ter hemes and bejitbr parents. A detachment of field artillery from Fort Bragg arrived in Salisbury Mon day afternoon awl took up camp on North Alain Street. Two officers and tbirtj^men^jMmi^ I TURN HAIR DARK . wrmsAGE TEA If Mixed with Bulphur It Darken* S» Naturally Nobody o*> Tell The oM-tinte mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur fpr darkening gray, streaked and faded hair is grat’dmbth er’s recipe, and folks are again using it to keep their hair ts good, evert color, which is quite sensible, as we arc liv ing in an age when a youthful appear ance is of the greatest advantage. # Nowadays, though, we don’t have the troublesome task of gathering the sage and the mussy mixing at .home. All drug stores sell the reatM-tp-dse prod uct, improved by the admtfort of other mgredicntt, called Sage and been applied. Snnpty tnbisten Vou? comb of a soft brdtS withstand <*aw this through your hair, taking one small sUan^a^a^time darkening the hair after a fAv applica tions, it also produces that soft lustre ib'attrlefivc ce 0< f - What the-World Is (Doing k C4S SEtS Bt (POPULAR cStiECHANICS cMAGAZIHZ Crops Measured by Meter on Auto Dashboard F6r recording the maaaorements of fields planted in various crops, a meter attached to the dashboard of an automo .. . j bile hag been included in the equipment of the Department of Agriculture. The instalment is operated from the game Hearing mechanism used f6r an ordinary speedometer. Each crop may be recorded on' its particular section and the dimen sions of the “stands” are shown in feet. At the right of {he device ii a sc&ie that registers the total distances covered! in mites and the number of trips made* As each patch of a certain kind is measured, it is added to the total. Each scale is labeled and has a button which must be pressed to throw it into action. Ten principal crops are provided for as well as idle ground and pasture land. *' ♦ * ing Golf Balls A cheap arid practical method of re newing old golf balls' is to fill the cracks with white rubber, cement, which can be obtained at any drug store. After filling the cracks, the entire surface of the ball js painted, m retiring the btrtls in this way there are no bumps or cracks, which have a tendency to influence ihc course of the ball, and the whitened surface will o^-CRUSH Zemfm-CRCRSBD drinks that ever wentdown a thirsty throat! you ask for a Ward’s Crush, be sure you jj| j