Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / June 23, 1924, edition 1 / Page 3
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Monday, June 23, 1924 Cammktfaatn SHI Granite Quarry Bonds. ( | Salisbury, June 22.—The countv com missioner have sold a block of $25,000 of Granite Quarry school bonds at a premium of $165, the bonds to bear in-1 tereat at the rate of 5 3-4 . The sale ■was made to- the Salisbury Bank and Trust Company acting for Caldwell and I Company, of Nashville. There were a number of bidders. ' The money will be used in the erection of a new central school building for the Granite Quarry district. L ! C&-CRUSH AwCSDSU fmwCRPSH “Caddy, that?B the beat drink i ever tasted -“and that*B saying a lot!” Here are six reasons why Orange* - Crush is so utterly delicious: (l) The natural fruit oil of oranges— • fUmtcrinM^BottU. which gives that delicate and dis- ii protect* you tinctive flavor; (2) The natural add again* off citrus fruits (oranges, lemons and counttrftiU. limes) —which gives the tangg iJiliVLitßa (3) Orange juice—which everybody llmrrm jfcnF likes; (4) Carbonated water—which : U M gives “zip,” sparkle, purity; (S) U. S. ]|rTT™' Certified food color —which makes it ||L |.:|B as appealing to the eye as to the taste; IP-rilll (6) Pure c ne sugar. ■lllM That’s al!. My, what a drink! Try 1 one today—i.esh off the ice. IffltarfMmk Orange-Crush Bottling Co. O SPENCER/N. c. ■-* A is V V \oi J \ You can get the most ‘ % food value out of wheat eating bakings that are made from good plain flour. A depend able baking powder must be employed or you do not get the full nutritious value of the wheat—nor will your bakings be as pal atable and easily digested. The same results cannot be had if you use Self Rising Flours, which are improperly packed in porous sacks or bags, thus allowing absorp tion of moisture from the air. Food authorities and physi cians agree that bakings that do not raise properly are bad for health. Such foods are hard to digest and in time cause stom ach trouble. Mothers who are interested in . the proper growth and health of their children (and all mothers are) should never use anything but a good brand of plain flour and a time-tested leavener such as Calumet—the economy Baking Powder. Calumet has more than the ordi nary leavening strength. It raises every baking to its height of nutri tious value. It is pure and depend able —do not look for a substitute— there is none. Use Calumet and be positive of whole some nutritious and economical foods. PACKED IN TIN -KEEPS STRENGTH IN 'i! ■ v. • ... ’ 1 Vilhjalmur Stefansson has sailed for ’ I Australia where he experts to explore . by airplane the “Never-Never Land” in , the barren interior of that continent. He expects to find rich resources in the I Great Australian Desert with a possi bility of discovering a place fit for human habitation. | Among prominent New Yorkers who were born on farms are Judge Elbert H- Gary, Mayor Hylan, Police Commis sioner Enright and Channcey M. De .pew. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE « Fled Ku Klux Threatening letters signed “Ku Klux K)an“ have driven Mrs. John Brooke and hqr family from their honse in I‘eunsgrove, N. J. One letter said that thethe Klan, at a meeting, objected to Miss Brooke’s daughter Alicia going au to riding at night with Kichard Kent, 19, son of a prominent merchant. : It was demanded that the young couple be kept apart or ‘uction will be taken.” Above is shown Alicia and below Mrs. Brooke, who sold her home and left to avoid further complications. PATT HARRISON CHAIRMAN PRO TEM OF GARDEN GATHERING Is On eof the Most Gifted Speakers in America Today. (By the Associated Press.) Washington, June 23.—Six years of active service on the oratorical tiring line in the Senate, preceded by four terms of political schooling in the House of Representatives, developed in Pat Harrison\a brilliance of forensic expres sion that led to his selection as tempo rary chairman of the Democratic nation al convention. Next to the youngest member of the Senate, a six-footer with a perpertual twinkle in his eye and a zooming voice that carries to the fringes of a crowd, he has a knack of putting into hie de livery and choice of words both a sting and a smile. His name is really Byron Patton Har rison. and so he was referred to in the congressional directory when lie, was serving his first term ne a member of the House from the sixth Mississippi dis trict. But now, as a senator, he is list ed as Pat. The senator is of the same Virginia stock as two former Presidents of the Knifed Staten William Henry and Benjamin Harrison. More than 100 years ago his grandfather, migrating from I the old dominion, settled near Crysatal j Springs,_ Mississippi, where Pat Harri-| son was born in August, 1881. His father. Robert Harrison, served in the Confederate army, receiving wounds from which he never fully recovered. The Harrison family suffered reverses! as a result of the Civil War, and at f nine years of age Pat sold newspapers, j But he kept to his school books, and finally worked. his way through Louis-! innn State University by serving as a waiter in a student boarding house. I After graduation, he studied law while teaching in a Mississippi country school. At 23 years of age he was elected dis trict attorney, serving in that capacity until 1910 when he was elected to Con gress. In 1918 Pat Harrison, who was mak ing a name for himself in the House, entered a three-cornered fight for the Democratic senatorial nomination in Mississippi, and received a majority over the combined vote cast for Senator Vard anian, who was 'a candidate for re-elec tion, and Governor Nol, who also was in the race. Vardaman had incurred the ill will of President Wilson. Harrison champion ed the President’s cause, and on enter ing the Senate proved one of Woodrow Wilson s staunchest defenders during the embittered days aftfr the war. Os late, he has assumed the role of one of the most caustic critics of the Repub lican administration. Senator Harrison’s home is in Gulf port, Mississippi. • He is married, has three'children, cares for Washington so ciety, plays a fair game of golf, likes to slip away from the Senate once in a while to watch a ball games, and usually relaxes in the evening by going to the movies. Aviators Plunge to Lake Bottom But Live. Chicago, June 21.—Two aviators) fell from an altitude of 75 feet into Lake Michigan today, plunged to the bottom of the lake with their plane, climbed from the trap in the cockpit, rose to the surface of the water and were rescued. Henry C. Clark, the pilot, and Ben Timm, mechanician, both of Chicago, were trying a new model hydroplane when Clark’s trouser leg caught in the rudder control and threw plane side wise into a wing slip. The aviators under water climbed through the maze of wires over the cock pit, and the plane, relieved of their weight, Tose to the surface a mile out in the lake. The men clung to the side of the plane until a tug came to the res cue. Rollin Lynde Hurt, writing in the World’s Work, has thisto sav on the migration of the Negro north: "His l children put on shoes. Instead of going to scfcqpl three months in the year, they j go nine months, and to a much better * school. Besides, there is ‘freedom’—a j wretched enough substitute for ractual j freedom, but nevertheless exhilarating. * Now they think principally of their less , fortunate brethren. To bring them north, to teach them, to civilise and up lift them la their ambition.” j 3th Birthday Event all This Week • f ' i • * vl Bffe Remember, everything at and Below Cost. The goods are going fast It will pay you to come every day. Remember, no goods delivered. No phone or mail orders filled as we are selling all the goods in our store at and below cost, to help the people out of work get what they need, we have put our mail order and delivery forces to waiting on customers as this will keep us from using more extra help, therefore reduce the amount we will lose by selling goods at cost and below cost. PARKS-BELK CO. Sell It For Less For Cash . SANDHILLS PEACHES TO THE NORTHERN MARKET The Sandhills Peach Industry This Year I Expected to Bring Over $2,000,000. j Aberdeen. June 22. —The largest and I finest crop of peaches ever produced in the sandhills is now beginning to move to northern and eastern markets. Pre ' dictions are that approximately 2.500 I iced refrigerator cars of 450 crates each ! will he shipped before the season is con | eluded next August, and that several I hundred additional cars will either be canned or distributed throughout this state in auto trucks direct to consumers. It is estimated that there will be ship- I ped from’ this section a fraction more than two peaches for each inrabitant of the United States. Several of the early varieties such as the Mayflower and Alexander have al ready'been picked and shipped and fair to gobd prices, depending on the quality, were secured. These inferior varieties outsold fruit being shipped by Georgia on the same market. Every effort 1 is being made this year to grow fruit of the highest quality. The fruit has been heavily thinned by hand so that what remains on the trees will mature to ax is STILL IN THE RACE ■■ ii Mm L OSCAR W. UNDERWOOD eellent. size. The trees have been well fertilized and cultivated. They have been thoroughly sprayed or dusted to control tile cureulio and thus prevent wormy fruit, under the direction of the state's entomological experts; with the result that it appears that there will be no commercial amount of warmy fruit. T Do you believe that the moon affects the weather? Will the children of red haired and dark haired parents have red hair? Has Prof. Baines discovered the Egyptians' secret of long life? Do you know what happened in Mmme. d'Alvare's most dramatic moment? Do you know how Don .Tesus Salas Barraza killed Gen. Patvcho Villa? Did Jonah really spemi three days inside the whale? Do you bend for beauty? Can you do the Cross Word Puzzle? For the answers to these questions and for ar ticles of interest to every member of the family, read the Magazine Section of next Sunday’s New York World. More than twenty-five thousand wo men have been fined or sentenced to im prisonment for violating the National Prohibition law. ir i i ■ ■ .iii.i i mi TEE OLD HOME TOWN BY STANLEY i ROBBINS WERE ' ~ r~ep)' WAIT INC, AT THE DEPOT TWO HOOPS BEFORE "THE TRAIN » (^4W~ WAS DUE WITH THEIR SON EGBERT WHO IS Coming home after eighteen tears absence - ) IoOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOtV » * - .*> <vxxxx»0000000000000 Special Hosiery j. ; A very fine lisle Golf Stocking—a splendid value in j | plain colors with fancy tops—Priced at SI.OO. Many Golf Stockings in Wool at $2.00. ! !• Women’s Silks, Full Fashioned, in good varieties of ] | colors. Richmond - Flowe Co. The Penny Ads Get Results-Try Them. PAGE THREE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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June 23, 1924, edition 1
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