Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / March 10, 1925, edition 1 / Page 6
Part of The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAGE SIX Hi ■ 1 ■ I For Sole' By Richmond - riowe Co. Concord, N. C. Exclusive Dealers For Cabarrus County 1 CROSSWORD PUZZLE HP — WF~ I 7 I 8 I 9 ~~WF r m H=i====J:--=-=y ■— ™ y=“- * aa £i """’""■■So " Jpt ill 35 3<C 31 40 41 4Z U-d4rrffH+y-y <3 -l&J •‘Tender the ———" is one of Rmlyard Kipling's famous works. The miss ing word is found is found in 25 vertical. Literary folks ought to discover it with out looking up the definition. HORIZONTAL. 1 Pertaining to the air. 6 You(Biblieal). 11 Blackish. - 13 That which holds the oar. 15 Fur-bearing animals. 16 Ghost. 17 Decay. 18 Ancient Persian viceroys. 20 Hasten. 22 Lat'ge birds. 24 Approaches. 25 Document. 26 Spanish gentleman. 28 Free. 20 To vSait on. 30 Vibratory motion. 32. Appointed. 33 To give forth. . 34 F^treatjfl. THE OLD HOME TOWN BY STANLEY S^Si T Doot!rTnjc. ” L A»°ur maw cmeErmnwc DOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCIOOOOQOOOOgwvwy^^^Qoyiew^y^Qi^ X , arrivals almost daily. All widths. All rises. * seection. Naw , , X ■■ ~ 35 Accident. ... 30 Small fur-bearing-animal. 43 Labor organization. 44 Beverage. 46 Commerce. 47 Killed. 48 To sing. 50 To coast (past tense). 151 Automobile license plate, j 52 One who thinks. . 54 Pounds (nbbr.). 51 Closer. 57 An Evergreen shrub. 59 To speak to. 60 Attempted. 61 To put to proof. 62 To appear. VERTICAL. 1 Article of clothing. 2 To do. 3 Extends. 4 To run against (past tense). 5 Sea food. 6 To. 7 Musical instruments. 8 Periods of time. 9 Yale. 10 Accomplish. 12 Put in tune. . 14 Some oiie else (pi.) 17 Recuperate. 19 To ’-rush in on. 21 The first garden. 23 By some means. 25. Indians trees. ' 27 Citizens of Rome. 29 Covering. 31 To tear. 32 Baby bear. 36 Urgent. 36 Areas away from the ocean. 37 Harassed. 38 Thin. 40 Between two hills. 41 Foods. 42 Bolshevists. 44 Desire to drink. 45 Joints in legs. 48 A game. 49 To vex. 52 Where lumber conies from. 53 Stratagem. 56 Skill. 58 Male sheep. TALKING “FOOLISHMENT” — •' ,-i Statesville Daily. f In the discussion of the bill to repeal the primary election law. which failed, some of the legislators intimated that the newspapers favored the law because they found it profitable to their business —received much gain by printing mat ter for candidates. This was notably true of Representative Connor, of Wil son county, who should be big enough to know better but who advertised the fact that he is willing to impute self interest to those who don’t agree with him, which isn't evidence of breadth, to put it ipildly. Mr. Connor complained that in the campaign period he has been unable - to get a notice in the papers as long as bis finger without paying for it. In the first place it is questionable if the revenue received by the. newspapers from this source is sufficient to influence the views of one given .to considering the box office receipts as a matter of policy, if there are such newspapers—a fact by no means established. The largest ben eficiaries. probably, are the dailies of wide circulation, and they spend much more than they receive in collecting and printing primary returns. The primary, therefore, costs the larges papers, more than it brings in. Furthermore Repre sentative Connor should know, if he knew what he was talking about, that the prac t ce of newspapers charging for printing campaign material is not related to the primary and wouldn’t be abandoned if the primary was abolished. In the old days, when every newspaper was by cus tom a party organ, it was also by cus tom a party pack-horse during the cam paign. The newspaper was expected to print, and did print, during toe cam paign, boosts for the party not only but for each-and every individual candidate. The average newspaper’# columns were filled, for months prior to the election, with political matter.. .That was the paper's job, for that It was supposed to exist. Its space ' was free for party purposes generally and each candidate expected individual boosts. The news paper could Worry about the expense of operation. That was ijot the concern of the politicians. Came «■ day when the newspaper peo ple began to use ordinary business 'sense. When they got down to brass tacks they were unable to figure out why they should furnish all the pnblicity for the party and the individual candidates at their own expense.', Thereupon l charging ad vertising rates for political boosts was adopted. The newspaper can, and most of them do, still advocate party success in some degree; and in some instances they champion a particular candidate be , cause they consider him the best man. But their columns are no longer open I for all sorts of political junk without money and without price. Some of the \ politicians have never forgiven the news i papers for the change of rule. Evi -1 dently Mr. Connor is sore about it. But | it wouldn’t help him in that respect if the primary -was abolished. There was much publicity matter in the old conren-1 ! tion days and would be again if the con vention was re-established, as it will not be. But the daya of free and unlimited newspaper publicity campaign mn-| j terial are gone forever. I «rs the | t fttrtax HarriWD,. y* cbkcom dally fojjjjffifr HSd-i 1/eUer BY HAI&Y B. HUNT ' NBA Service Writer WASHINGTON The farmer haa been framed again, in k w the opinion of Senator Ar thur Capper. •* Two-dollar wheat did it. Wheat at 12 a bushel, Capper thinks, wa* largely responsible for the brake* being applied to proposed agrlcul-- tural relief measures, pending in Congress. t The result was the failure of Congress to enact the recommen , dations of the president's agTlctjF . tural commission, by which the. administration's pledge to agri culture r was .to . have been ' re deemed, f Interests hostile to farm relief. Capper charges, with $2 wheat as a club, hammered home the idea , that there was not and never had been a real farm problem justify ing the overhauling of the machin ery of farm marketing. . ... . » • • 44 A CfcORDING to these claim j\ anti." says , Capper, “the farmer is now a Croesus, luxuriating in the golden stream of $2 wheat. i "But this it not a true picture. "Speculators and gamblers, not the wheat growers, reaped this Chicago wheat pit harvest "The facts arc that .last year's wheat crop brought the wheat farmer between $1 and $1.25, and not the $2 he is now credited with getting. "To be sure. $1 25 wheat, and an unprecedentedly large yield per acre, made last year s crop the most profitable since the war. "But the farmer sold his Wbcdt i Post and Flagg's Cotton Letter. New York, March 9.—The market to day was rather dull, as both the trade and the speculative element are evident ly awaiting weather developments in Texas, which, due to the continued drought are becoming more serious daily. Advices from various sources predicting rains in the southwest’ had an unsettling effect on the market in the afternoon and prices eased off somewhat. Spot advices, however" remain as bullish as ever. Exports are keeping up and dry goods news becoming more cheer ful, showing nn increasing demand for print cloths particularly. As long as trade conditions remain as they are no real depreciattion of values is expected and advantage should be taken of any dips that occur due to a weak ened technical condition of the market. Sentiment as a whole remains bullish, Cod Liver Oil In Sugar Coated Tablets For Puny Kids Forget the nasty tasting, stomach up setting cod liver oil and give the thin, puny, underdeveloped children McCoy’s Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets if you want to give them ! a good appetite and put pounds of good, healthy flesh on their bones. *. fej . Doctors know all about them ahd ; so does the! Pearl Drag Company and all good pharmacists ail over America, fdr they are in great demand, because they are not laggards but show results in a | few de#s. i : - ' They «re not expensive either—6o . tabletn~6o eentß find children take them like candy. U; | A very sickly child, age 9, gained 12 . pounds In seven months and is strong ; and be»jtby. ,| One skinny wdman gained 9 pounds lin 24 days. "Be afire to get McCoy’s, the original \ and genuine Cod Liver Oil Compound Getting Too Fat? Try This—Reduce People who don’t grow too fat are the. fortunate exception. Bat if yon find the fat-jjiceumulatlng or already enmber- Uome. -pdu will be wise to follow this | suggest!An, which is endorsed by thou j sands of Aik your «4tvo test hulk of It—before Nov.' and when wheat spared t* $1 'ln .Chicago, (he farmer who had plowed, planted and harvested the grain had none of it to sell. "Price increase* between elec tion and the new yea s were *uch that the farmer, . according to Julius Barnes, merchant exporter, lost just about $400,000,000 by his early selling. "The consumer of bread will pay this $400,000,000. But the farmer didn't get- it." • • • * /'l ENERAL ISAAC SHER- It WOOD, who retires from , Congress March 4at the age of- 99, treasures aa one of the mementoes of his later daya in Washington a large • crowned, broad-brimmed hat given to him s by the late Julius Kahn, former chairman of the military affairs committee, whose wife l)as just been chosen by California voter* to fill his seat is the next Con gresa. "just before Kahn took his last departure from Washington," says Sherwood, "I met him in the corridor. He had on a peculiar hat. 1 said: •• -I’ve been looking for tlpat kind of a hat in Washington, but couldn't find one.’ "Kahn pulled off hia hat and said: 'Try It on.' When I did ao . he said: 'lt's Just your size. Your thinking apparatus and mins ar* the same. I'm going to glvn yofi that hat, with my compliroenta. and I hope you will wear ll.' I still wearing that hat/* says Sherwood. ‘Bg any trlb ite t« Kahn." although, as has been said before, many nre on the fence waiting to jump either way as weather conditions warrant. POST AND FLAGG. , Publishing Financial Statements. Publishers' Auxiliary.. In another column of this paper is C*e account of controversies in Idaho and Michigan over the publication of itemised financial statements by school boards. Publishers in other states, no doubt, are experiencing the same indifference on the . part of school boards and other public officials to existing laws regarding such publication and the action taken in these two, cases should encourage them to sim ilar activity. While the editor who insist* 1 upon pub lication of itemised statements may feel that he is laying himself open to sus picion of aelf-inferest, he need not. "He does not usually make aDy great profit from, them and in insisting upon their publication .he is performing a service for the people of his community. They as taxpayers hhve a right to know how pub lic money is spent, who it, how much fie receives and what he receives it for. There is safety for public funds in a published account of expenditures and receipts and the people of a community have tbs right to dema'nd through their newspaper that the law providing for such publication shall be complied with. , 1 ' = ■* 1 Senators From North Carolina Will Hold »L' H, «*> Committee Job*. Washington, March 7.—Senator Sim mofis continues ranking Democrat on the finance committee, under 'an; assignment i of place* just made PuMie.. He & also 6n Commerce, Itrlgatip* and reclama tion bodies. H*n«ror (Jverm*n, who is on ; the appropriations committee, heads the ; Democrats on JBhileW and Judiciary. znftin * <r ? «*i tMtmtm at our rMb I ; ; - . .J.. ~. .:. * It’s a sight worth seeing— those hundreds of efficient and contented Workers in the World’s largest and most modern Baking Powder Fac tories, dressed in white aprons, doves and caps-*-living emblems of cleanliness. Never touched by human hands CALUMET tax WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING POWDER is produced and packed in various departments whose floors are spotless whose walls are dotted ' with countless windows through which fresh air and real sunlight flow. Think of these things when vou : buy and use Calumet and you wilT'hevej wonder why it is the every INGREDIENT u. s. B food *K r AUTHORITIES TKST ''V , i! W? - ■. '; ■ - ULU aV« TOtaa THOSE OF any other brand 1 1 . ! ;•I f V;. .. 1 i.: . . .. • 't- ■ 1 ■ ■ •■■■>• 1 'i , 40 Kinds of Pain ’ *■ There are countless pain* tlhe chest as soon as a chest cold 1 which one' can . wip—stop them Starts. Don’t suffer, don’t take I in a moment. The pains allied risks. And don’t be forced to 1 A h> rheumatism, to so re nee s, wait for relief. Keep St Jacobs I W 4mw huneness and chest colds. Oil on hand. I Y Tt7 Millions of people have done Nature will-deal with the L wAANKJ * is - 65 years/by rub- cause of the trouble. Or per - fctoff Wlth St Jacobs OiL They haps other helps may be neces- VAjik have saved eons of suffering. It sary. But the first thing is to folly not to do this the mo- get relief. Stop the pain. a pain appears. Some may suggest other ways N£e»M|H St Jacobs Oil acts m two to do this. But St. Jacobs Oil NA irritation which relieves count- jt for-65 years. You can rely on , VSYtes pains. Then it brings the it—your druggist guarantees it I V.uflWpoa to the surface to relieve Let this time-tested way draw I congestion which causes out the pain at once. Get it be- L Kub it on the sore smjt when- ready. You may in that way ever a pain appears. Rob it on save miay unhappy hours. Mkannistlsiu Mwai tmmmam Lnwhspi Wnrwuso Chest Colda *.i : . [ • * /r y - *■ fv * ■ URuba Pain Away | , ~ j:v .. ■ OririiCMM I'- 1 ' |The Penny Ads Get RMitta-'Tix Them. v Tuesday, March 10, 1925
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 10, 1925, edition 1
6
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75