PAGE SIX
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| Aca>mmociatins 1034 Quests
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•BELIEVE THE MISSING j'
WOMAN WAS KIDNAPED j
Every Other Theory as to Disap- .
| pfarance Seems to Be L'nwarrant
| ed.
j Asheville, April 13. —"What has j
become of Mis. Viola Plemmons” |.
I This question asked hundreds of |
1 times by Hot Springs citizens since 1
j she was listed as missing ten days
1 1 ago, has drawn just so many an- |
■ j swens, all vague and based only on I
| j supposition. No clue of any sort as
j to her whereabouts or the manner of |
• I her goi ng has been disclosed
j Now comes the latest supposition,
j Chief of Hot Springs Police Craig
j Ramsey declared today that he be
. lieved the woman had been kidnap
ped. He declared that he had little
> ]reason for turning to the theory of
| kidnapping, with the exception of
| the fact that ten days of search,
j conducted a large part of the time by
as many as 50 men, has eliminated
all other possibilities.
The only clue which tends to sup
| port in any manner the kidnapping
belief is contained in the statement
of Troy Harrison, carpenter who
accompanied Mrs. Plemmons’ hus
band on a fox hunt in the evening of
April 2, when the woman dieappear
j ed. He told of having seen a large.
I automobile going westward at high
| speed while he was returning to Hot:
Springs for a lantern that night.
Centering first around a belief of
suicide the search for the woman !
was carried to the French Broad !
river, which has been dragged for
upwards of a mile in all directions, i
' but no trace found. Dynamite also
I failed to reveal the presence of a I
body. The mountains of the sections j
| have all been combed following ex
pression of the belief that the wom
an might have become unbalanced
' and wandered off aimlessly into the
fastnesses. No trace has been found,
and her old home country to the
west also smothers in its breast any
secret which might have been en
truteds to it.
The murder theory, advanced
shortly after search of the river
proved fruitless, has also been eli
minated, mainly for the lack of any
known motive which could have
brought about her death, and also
because she left a note for her hus
band No evidence of any foul p’ny
has been disclosed The note is one of
the most puzzling angles of the en
tire affair. Mr. Plemmons exhibited
it again today, stating that it was
bis wife’s writing and was found
.... , ■
THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE
hanging on a nail in the living
room of their home just aftetr she
had vanished. The note, unsigned,
follow’s:
“1 am gone to a ione grave to reap
what I have sown. I want every
body to be good to Fairda and the
| children and never find fault with
i him for my going like this. It was
j'ray fault only.”
| The clause about reaping what she
; had sown is not clear since it is
known that the woman appeared to
be much in lov<* with her husband,
and it is said that when ever he hap
pened to be away she would be ex
cessively worried.
TO CRITICS
When I was seventeen I heard
From each censorious tongue,
“I’d not do that, if I were you;
You see you're rather young.”
Now that I number forty years,
I’m quite a* often told
Os this or that I shouldn’t do
Because I'm quite too old.
O carping world! If there’s an age
Where youth and manhood keep
An equal poise, alas! I must 1
Have passed it in my sleep.
BI’RBANK’S RELIGION |
LPHELD BY LINDSEY
Ills Was Real Religion That Work*
Fcr tne Betterment of the Human
Ren-
Santa Rosa. Cali:.. April 14.
The address delivered here today by
I Judge Ben B. Lindsay, of Denver, at
I the public memorial to I.uther Bur
! bank was both a tribute and a de
fense of the horticulturist’s religions
1 beliefs.
| “Luther Burbank was the most
religious man I ever knew,” Judge
Lindsey said. "His was a real re-
I '.igten that actually works for human
betterment —a religion that dares to
cha’ienge the superstition, hypocrisy
and -nam that so often worked cruel
ties. inquisitions, wars and massacres,
s "The prejudiced beneficiaries of
organized theology. miscalled re
ligion. refused to see that Burbank,
the gifted child of nature* saw with
a vision as crystal as theirs is dense
and dark.
| “And so they assailed him.
:- "it is impossible to estimate the
wealth he has created that has been
given generously to tne world. Un
like inventors, or workers in other
fields, no patent rights were given
him. nor did he seek a monopoly in
what he did Had that been tne
ease, I,other Burbank would have
I been the world's richest man. As it
I is, tie* world has been richer because
I of him and in this he found a joy
and .satisfaction that no millions of I
I money could have given him.
\w :“Luil»er Burbank lives forever in
I the myriad fields of strengthened
I grain, in the new forms of fruits and
I flowers and plants and vines and
I trees and above all. the newly
I watered gardens of the numnn mind
I from whence shall spring human
I freedom from those earthly fields
! that shall drive out god*, false and
I brutal.”
! BEBGDOLL- FREED
IN QIICK FASHION
I Seduction Charges Against Him Fall
I Through; Vents \Vrath on Ameri-
I cans. ,
Mosbaeh, Germany. April 14.
I Grover <\ Bergdoll. the American
I draft evader, speedily was acquitted
I today of charges of seduction and
I impairing the morals of a minor
" after a trial which lasted seven
hours before a court composed of one
judge and two jurors.
Tin* state's carefully built up on*e.
after two months’ investigation,
blew up under the testimony of the
psycho-analysist. Prof. Haas Cruble,
of the University of Heidelberg, who
testified that hi* examination of sev
enteen-year-old I*eisel Schmidt, tne
chief witness against Bergdoll, con
, vinced him she was of “subnormal
i mentality and untrustworthy.”
\ The girl herself was put on the
I stand, and wilted under the exami-
I nation by Bergdoll’s counsel. She
I] was unable to picture the cireum-
I j stance of an alleged attack on her
I {three years ago so as to convince the
I! court.
I Fn< ing a sentence from one to ten
■ J year> b>r each offense. Bergdoll nd-
Ij mitted he had received the greatest
■ - ■■ :
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Yorke & Wadsworth Co.
The Old Reliable Hardware Store
Phone 30
scare of his lift*, despite previous'
beetle e sea pedes. Nervous nnr with
perspiration streaming down his
forehead, he bitterly attacked tne
private detective, Sachs, a former
American, who had preferred The
charges but who was not present in
cour^
The Question
After he had been fishing for some
time without success, Hast us sud
denly felt a tremendous tug at the
line. Is>si»g his balance, he hurtled
over the side of the boat into the
water, still holding, however, onto
his pole as he splashed about. "What
ah wants to know is dis,” he ex- i
Thursday, April 15, 1926
claimed, “lx dis nigger a-fiahin‘ or is
dis (fell a-niggerin’ l
A ten-ton armored war tractor,
bullet-proof and powerful enough to
knock down a house, will be used by
the sheriff of Huron County, Ohio,
to arrest criminals who barricade
i themselves. ~