PAGE SIX I ; Champ in Training l ' ' /: 1 i - jf| t I f ir iiM * K |jfl| ft I I ■ j I - Bags. I WKiMfflßMm M^wWPlTiT^ I 9 B fl H H S ft^ fSr sjy ihi JSI «§§ fl| n : JO§iP 111111 BBHr VH « HB »e ms n 9 fl» W 1 m b mi ft* wmff b BE Jack Dempsey Ah* started active training for future ring bouts Hera he s shown in his quarters at Los Angeles with one of his sparring parV tiers The champ has been displaying good form in his early workout* despite his long absence from the ring ; TYPESETTING BY PHOTOGRAPH | =_■ -• I British Inventors Say Their Machines Will Revolutionize Principles of Printing. London. Aug. 10.—Long experi ments with typesetting by photogra phy have been carried through to suc jo cessful completion by two British in i' venters. Tiiey asserted today that they had perfected a machine which “will revolutionize the principles of printing in use since the time of Caxton.” The jiew machine does away with I metal type by substituting for it a film upon which the subject matter is pho tographed. It has a keyboard like a typewriter which selects characters and letters from the master film and I projects them rapidly on to a sensi tized film, where they are photograph- i ed, the exposure requiring a fraction of a second. This exposed film is then developed and can be printed from in a variety of ways, of which the most favored is the lithograph pro cess. Different sizes of type are obtained by adjustment of the focus of the lens of the camera, which projects the mas ter film on to the sensitized film. This process i« automatic. A large variety of type will be available, as a single spool of mater film three inches wide and two inches in diame ter contains the equivalent of 2.700 fonts of type. If the invention fulfills expectations it can be used with wireless teleg raphy. so that a machine installed in one city can “set up’’ matter in other cities simultaneously. It is also pre dicted it will reduce the size of print ing establishments and result in scrap ping much costly composing machin ery at a saving of millions of dollars in capital outlay. Books and magazines, it is stated, will become cheaper and more beauti-1 fnl because of the greater variety of I types available and because the clear-1 ness of outline will be preserved by avoiding an intermediate process. The inventors are J. R. C. August ( and E. K. Hunter, his brother-in-law, , and they have been working on the , machine for four years at the plant , of Iliffe & Son, at Walworth. The ! machine is protected by seventy Brit- , ish and foreign patents, and business j men representing large interests are already associated with the commer- 1 rial exploitation of the invention. , Iliffe & Sons are one of the largest ( British publishers and are specially ( known for automobile and motorcycle ] trade journals. The head of the firm is* a prominent members of Parlia- , ment. j STATEMENT BY DR. MeCAIN 'J Patients Not Being Turned Out Be cause of Lack of Finances. Sanatorium, Aug. 18.—Patients are not being turned out of the North Car olina sanatorium on account of lack of maintenance funds said Dr. O. T. McCain, superintendent of the insti llation, in a statement which he issued Mo the daily News tonight, but on ac count of lack of room. Dr. McCain says that there are 140 (jMople, who have tuberculosis in the curable stage, who are waiting to be admitted into the sanatorium and that inhere is a danger of this advancing Into the the incurable stage unless They are given the knowledge of how take care of themselves in the san- S All arrange men's have been com ipMUd by the International Brother hood of Electrical Workers for its Mhaol convention to be held in Seat- the third week of Sep j NAKED MAN DANCES HIS WAY UP FIFTH AVENUE Wanted to Take All Cops to Heaven. —Makes Them Dress as “Angels.” New York Herald. A naked man found dancing along Fifth Avenue at 33rd street, heading for the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, where, he said, he had an “appointment to meet the Lord,” was taken in tow early this morning by Patrolman Mar tin Walsh, of the West 30th Street station. Walt* was on poet at Fifth | Avenue and 32nd Street when he saw a naked man dacing along the side ( walk at 33rd Street, signing a hymn and shuoting, “Cleanse yourself and ■ prepare to meet the Lord.” I Walsh agreed with the naked man ! that the Lord had been at the Wal j dorf, but had gone away and left | another place. Walsh agreed to ac company the undressed individual to the new meeting lace and finally got him into a taxicab with the aid of several chauffeurs. At the West 30th Street police sta tion the naked man said that he had an appointment with the Lord, was soon to become an angel and had been appointed to take “all the cops in the city with iiiin." Patrolmen on reserve agree to be come angels and they procured sheets from their beds. These they wrapped about themselves and the police sta tion resembled a K'.an meeting when Dr. Felter, of New York Hospital and Nurse Donohue, of Bellevue Hospital arrived. The naked man was wrapped in a sheet and taken to the later institu tion. where he said he was Thomas F. Clark, a real estate dealer, of Richmond Hill Road, Staten Island. He said he gave his clothes to those | in want along Broadway and distrib | uted his money among the hungry. Three Dangerous Elements. | Hohenwald, Tenn., Aug. 18.— : Speaking here today at the annual Meriweather Lewis celebration. Briga dier General A. J. Bowley, commander at Fort Bragg, N. C., declared that there are three elements in the United States’ population that are particu larly dangerous to the country’s in stitutions. These he enumerated as follows: “First: The radicals, who openly preach bloody revolution, attempting the destruction of the country and the establishment of a communistic gov ernment, such as we see in Soviet Russia. “Second : The socialistic element, who. thougli not preaching open revo lution, attempt the overthrowing of our present government by political means. , | “Third: Well meaning but ill-ad- I vised people who fail to see the cam ouflage thrown over the true designs of these radicals and socialists, and "ho lend their aid in the radical and socialistic movements without realiz ing that in following such slogans as “Law. Not War,” they are really aid ing in the destruction of the great American constitution.” Caught Napping. First Doctor—“ Tell me, Doc, have you ever made a serious mistake in a diagnosis?” Second Doctor—“ Yes, once. I told n man he had a touch of indi gestion. Afterwards I found he waa rich enough to have had appendi i citis.” 1 Mexico’s first long-distance tele phone line, soon to be constrncted, will connect the City of Mexico with Laredo, Texas, byway of Tampico and Monterey i BEgy rnamr- _ IMB cSaififlf Hjm KaJO -Q3 fflfflP RBS I'S-Hn* jjgpqß .gslff Hflß 9BBH mm ’ matt jgp 'wm I True value of property increased from I '— uuaMn. Why not sell our goods there? Consider what a rich purchaser she is. It was Louisiana’s destiny to become a great portal, not only for the South, but for the Nation. 2,000 miles of coast line; 4,700 miles of navigable rivers, the great Mississippi running the entire length of the Sfafte—these give her the outlets she needs for her multiplicity of products, and the inlets for ours. The waters of the great river have touched 26 States before they wash by the docks at New Orleans, the second port of the nation. They bear not only commerce, but the rich alluvial deposits that have made the famous delta lands. Corn, cotton, sugar cane and rice are produced in enormous quantities. 3,000,000,000 feet of lumber come from her forests each year. The surface of her lands is so rich that Louisiana hardly dreamed that untold wealth lay beneath, yet her salt mines have produced $ 16,000,000 of wealth in twenty years. In a like time Louisiana has become the world’s greatest producer of sulphur, $ 119,000,000 worth having been mined. Then came petroleum, 24,000,000 barrels a year and an annual production of 60 billion feet of natural gas. All the farm crops are produced in abundance in a climate that gives year-round cultivation. No wonder that Louisiana’s assessed property value has increased 300% in ten years. This vast market, this great store-house of wealth is close by. Our own products can be sold there without great cost for transportation. Louisiana furnishes rail facilities and a splendid road system for our salesmen. She has the money to purchase our products and provides the machinery whereby we can sell them. 1 Louisiana’s newspapers offer a quick and convenient means of letting Louisiana know what we have to sell. Why not use them? , I y hc South is your fiest uirket THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Statistics Population, 1923 .77? i ,849,746 Area, square miles 45,409 True property value, 1923 $ 3,416,860,000 Value of manufactured products, 1923... $ 479,400,000 Lumber cut, feet, 1923 3,386,000,000 Value of mineral products, 1923 $ 75,519,000 Number of farms 135,463 Value of farm products, 1923 $ 194,700,000 Cotton crop, bales, 1923 365,000 Com, bushels, 1923 24,702,000 Railroad mileage 5,065 Highway expenditures, 1923 15,142,000 These Newspapers Will Sell Our Goods to Louisiana Baton Rouge State Times LaFayette Advertiser Lake Charles American Press Monroe News-Star . New Orleans Daily States New, Orleans Item New Orleans Times-Picayijne Shreveport Times Wednesday, Aug. 19, 1925

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