Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Aug. 17, 1923, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO PENNY COLUMN Pocketbook Hells, Cinnamon and Sticky Funs. Dove-Bost Co. 17-lt-p. Iceberg Lettuce, Celery, Tomatoes, Cab bage, coro, peppers. beans., peas, okra, sweet potatoes. Lippard & Harrier. 17-lt-p. Lost—Class Pin ol 1913, Fastened to a piece of ribbon. Please return to 16 North Spring Street. 16-2 t-c. Lost—Two Parrottees. Plumage Green with 1 yellowish tinge. Reward for re turn. Notify 628 J. 16-3 t-p. Round Dance at Kindley Mill Swimming Pool on Tuesday night,' August 21st. Script SI.OO. 16-st-p. For Sale—Building and Loan Stock: 15 shares Cabarrus County Associa tion. series -1!). 5 shares Citizens se ries 30. J. C. MeCaskill, T. M. C. A. 16-2 t-p. Home Made Sweet Cucumber Pickles. Dove-Bost Co. 17-lt-p. Fountl—Lest Dog Large Black Hound. M. L. Wineeoff, Concord, X. C., Route 4. 13-ot-p. Army Riding Bridles $1.50. Concord Ar my & Navy Store. 13-6 t-p. Wanted—Students to Work in Ofiice while taking business course. Tuition paid from guaranteed position after graduation. Edwards., Business Col lege. High Point, N. C. 11-25 t-p. If You Have a Neighbor Who Is Not Tak : iug The Times, tell him about our great i ty days. ts. Land Deeds and Mortgage Trust Deeds. 5 cents each, at Times and Tribune Office. JJse of Scopolamine Would Violate Two I Fundamental Rules of Common Law i By DR. GEORGE W. KIRCHWEY, Penologist. SUPPOSE the suspect didytell the truth under the influence of scopolamine, the “drug-tliat-makes-you-tell-the-truth’’ that created such a sensation in San Quentin. Would evidence obtained through 1 its use be admissible in a court of law? No. Our system of law is accusatorial rather than inquisitorial. Men used to be tortured to make them confess. The rack and thumbscrew were used. The idea may have been at one time to get the truth, but the effect was to wring a confession from the victim. The*use of scopolamine might be classed as a mild form of torture; drat, assuming that it does bring out the truth, it would violate two funda-' mental rules of our common law. The first of these is that the accused person may not be questioned after arrest or during a magisterial hear ing, and the second is that torture'may not be used to extort the truth. In many European continental'countries the magisterial function is' inquisitorial. He questions the witness, heckles him, tries to wring the, truth out of him. . In the English common law this is not done; it is not possible. Under .our system the accused man cannot be questioned either preliminary to or during his trial. A confession may not be obtained from a man unless it is a free confession, given without fear or favor. Otherwise it cannot be produced in court. No immunity can be promised. A confession obtained under promise of immunity can’t be introduced. All that can be done- is for the accused to be asked whether he wishes’to make any statement, and even then the police official must caution him that anything he may say will be used against him. Indeed, we carry it to the point that the district attorney may not draw the attention of the jury to the fact that the accused did not take the witness stand. To do So is to furnish a basis for a new trial, and the higher court must grant a new trial. Under the effects of scopolamine you will get the false and true, the fact and fantasy bubbling to the surface. If a man in his senses cannot be made to talk, how can he be made to talk by robbing him of his senses. Week End Specials For Friday and Saturday i Come Cook Them Over PARKER’S SHOE STORE Between Parks-Belk and McLellans 5 and 10 Gent Store ■■■ ■mu ■ ■■lii'in wn-ITIHI-txrea.a w«»i ARE YOU A QUIET BABY? It is a well known proverb that “a quiet baby gets no milk.”- There are more ways than one to make a noise. ' * X THE TRIBUTE.. Last—Between Concord and Albemarle. Silvertown Cord tire on rim. Reason able reward tor return to Ritchie-Cald well Hardware Store, Concord. 17-2 t-p. Kingan Reliable and F. F. V. Hams, fresh stock. Lippard & Barrier. 17-lt-p. We Have Nice Barbecue Pig at Dutch Lunch. Church street. Also fresh fish and Reef Special on draught. Come in and try our barbecue. 37-2 t-p. For , Rent—Two Furnished Rooms. Ap ply Mrs. \V, M. Harris. 62 North Church St. 17-2 t-p. All Os Our Perishable Goods Kept on cold storage—it's sanitary. Dove-Bost Co. 17-lt-p. Wante—Ten Carpenters Experienced in form work. Apply Cabarrus Savings Bank building. 17-2 t-chg. Tennis Rackets Reduced. Ritchie Hard ware Co. 14-ot-c. Two Horse Farm For Rent, Near Georgevilie. D. F. Widenhouse. E. Depot Street. 13-6 t-p. 16-Foot Army Check Lines. All Leather. $3.75. Concord Army and Navy Store. 13-6 t-p. I Am Prepared to Figure on Any Paint ing and paper hanging which you might wish to have done. Estimates gladly given. W. A. Kendrick. Phone 754 R. 11-6 t-c. For Rent—One Five and One Six Room bungalow, new. Light and water con nections. Daw Phone SO, Night phone 682 J. S-ts. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. South Atlantic League. Team , Won Lost PC. Maeon ... .27 18 .600 Charlotte 25 r 18 .581 Spartanburg 25 18 .581 Augusta 19 21 .475 Greenville 17 24 .415 Gastonia 14 28 .333 Results Yesterday. Maeon 5; Charlotte 4: (10 innings). Spartanburg 4-11: Gastonia 5-2. Augusta 3; Greenville 4. American League. Team Won Lost- PC. New York 71 37 .658 tleveland 61 51 .545 Detroit ..53 51 .510 St. Louis 54 52 .509 Chicago .. .. V, ... .Tol 57 *472 Washington 50 57 *44(7 Philadelphia 45 02 .426 Boston 43 02 <409 Results Yesterday. New York 3; St. Louis 1. * Philadelphia 0; Detroit 3. Washington 9; Chicago 2. Boston 3; Cleveland 12. National League. Team Won Lost PC*. New York 71) 31)' .052 Cincinnati 04 40 .5.80 Pittsburgh 04 * 47 .570 Chicago HO 52 .530 Brooklyn 50 54 . 513 St. Louis 55 57 401 Philadelphia 38 72 .345 Boston 33 70 .303 Results Yesterday. St. Louis 0;> Brooklyn 3. Chicago 0: Boston 2. - Pittsburgh 5; Philadelphia 8. Cincinnati 1 ; New York 7. Piedmont League. Team Won Lost PC. Danville .20 12 .636 Greensboro 18 19 .480 Durham 17 18 .480 Winston-Salem 17 18 .480 High Point 17 19 .472 .Raleigh 10 19 .457 Results Yesterday. Greensboro 7: Raleigh 8 (10 innings). Danville 9; High Point 9 (10 innings, darkness). ■ Durham 4: Winston-Salem 4. (10 in nings. darkness). Four Killed in Panic at French Bull Fight. Paris, Aug. 15. —Four persons were killed and twenty-five injured this after noon when a bull stampeded the crowd at the annual amateur bull light held near Aries op the Fete of the Assump tion. Nine of the injuries are in a se rious condition. It is customary for the yoiui'S -of Provence who possess skill in !h hull ring to participate in this festival com bat. which is a great attraction to.' the Provencal fair ones. This explains the incident of today, whot-h could not have occurred ah a professional fight. The maddened animal leaped the har rier into the jnelosure reserved for the amateur fights, who were waiting for a chance to demonstrate their skill. In stantly the young men climbed into the grandstand, where the crowd was thrown into a panic* As the spectators rushed toward the upper tiers ol scats the stand fell, burying many in the debris. Barbers Can't Charge For I'nordered Frills. New York. Aug. 16.—1 f 20 c*:ts is the fixed tariff for a shave in a barber shop, that is all a barber in the place may charge a patron pho asks tor noth ing but a shave. This was the ruling of Magistrate Oberwager in Tombs Court imposing a fine of $25 ou Anthony Santoro, oarboi;. at No. 298 Broadway. Santoro was arrested recently on complaint of A. W. Morf. manager of the Woodstock Typewriter Company. He failted lo tip the barber who shaved him and when he gave Santore 50 cents he received 20 cents change, Morf caused Santoro's arrest, alleging the proprietor told him that when patron* failed to tip. the amount was added fit their charge, as barbers would not,work without tips. _x n court Shntre denied this, saying the additional' 19 cents was for a hot towel and other special attention. Life’s Constant Changes. In lniman life there is a constant change pf fortune; and it is unreason able to expect an exemption from the common fate. Life itself decays, and all things are" daily changing.—Plu tarch. Steady Going. The way to get a great deal of work done Is to be continually doing' a little. —Boston Evening Transcript. Are You Acquainted With OUR MAGAZINE STAND Most Concord folks are, — : and realize that we carry the . largest and most complete stock of Magazines and per iodicals to be found in the ; city. Also all the latest and best books by your favorite authors are he>e on sale ,as .soon as they are published.' When you want something to read, think of Musette, fe And Use Your Telephone Our Number of 479 fHF CONCORD DAILY TKIgyNl Macfadden Launches New Magazine HHf Jv MM mi iff * * ■>><«*. „ : < ... Cover of Bernarr Maefadden's New Magazine New York, Aug. Hi. Bornarr Macfad- 1 den. the President of the Macfaddeu Pub lications. Inc., owner of Physical Cul ture. True Story, Movie Weekly. Nat ional Brain Power, Beautiful Womanhood and the Metropolitan Magazine, has elec trified the publishing by launching a new magazine of startling purpose. Disregarding the usual conservative “first printing” policy, he has presses run* ning night ami day to turu out ay. ini tial issue, running into hiiTTdmls of jw||M| rnmfk Bernarr Macfadden FLOOD WATERS ARE HEADED FOR DENVER Torrent is Sweeping Down the Platte Canyon Toward Denver—Residents Being Warned. Denver, Colo-. »iiug. 16.—Flood wa ters are sweeping down the pintle canyon toward Denver, following n icr rific cloludburst early tonight, according to information received at the Denver police department shorty after 8 o'clock. Every available policeman has been rushed to the loyvlunds bordering the Platt river ousid* of Denver, mid residents are being warned. The flood •waters are expected to reach here in half an hour. Water is spreading over the low lands at lattleton. 10 miles from here and near Engllowood, a suburb. Tele phone operators nt summer hesorts in the I’latte canyon, where the water is •rising notified the Denver police de partment. , .No loss of fife has been reported thus far. At 3:30 o'clock, all telephone con nections with I.ittlleton were reported to have gone down. The first indications of the near ap proach of the high waters to the city were given shortly after 9 o'clock when patrolmen reported that the Platte river was rising near Averin ml park, the motor tourist camp on the outskirts of. the city, where approximately 3.500 automobiles are encamped. Shortly after houses nearby, on the lowlunds. besides the river banks were inundated. The water rose above the ground floors of the residence in many instances, and the. occupants fled with such beloßgings an they could hastily gather together. The rise in the- river was rapid but it did not strike the city in the form of a wal of water as hud been feared. In the Valverdf district which is about two miles from the business dis tricts the basements and ground floors of many homes wgere reported flooded. lea and Water. When two molecules of water cons bine to make one molecule of ice, half of their free electrons enter into the new molecule to hold it together. Their grip Is not strong, whlclf ac counts for the ease wOth which ics melts. The other half of the elec trons remain In the external Held, and give ice the power to combine directly with a few strong chemicals. Where Time tyaa No Value. ' Among many African races, there are no words to Indicate time of day, - ■ I thousands. In his salutatory, which has attracted national comment, Mr. Mnefadden says: "With this issue. True Romances come to life. In it we will attempt to present the trite Jtory weighted with the best type of hitman interest. • But there is a higher object for our existence/than the mere telling of stories. We claim to be the Salvation Army of the magazine world. ■ "We intend to visit the homes of the poor; to go down into the dregs of hu man life. We will describe the squalor, the filthiness of, the lives of these people, but every story SwH present a gnut les son. » * * We will put out warning signs in the form of tragic and dramatic experiences that will enable those who are harboring thoughts of misdeeds to see the penalties thuKthey have to pay. "We expect to inakeHhis magazine of fascinating iirterest frorp Waiver to cover. * * * Also you may rend of\lie muck and mire of the lives of the characters pre sented therein." Mr. Fulton Oursler. the 1 supervising editor of all Macfaddeu publications,' promises that in the pages of True Rom ances the render will find not only stor ies from the strange book of hiyiian life, not only the romances of reality, (the treasure out of the hearts of people'who have really lived, but even more than adventure and excitement .and thrills. Mr. (JroYe Wilson, a widejy known and bril liant magazine man. is in editorial charge. \ Mr. Mcfndden's rise as a publisher of national prominence has been phenome nal. He is even better known, however, as the Father of Physical Culture, whose name is listed for imperishable fame among those who have served their fel low men courageously—’great in the ar duous greatness of things done. ARTHUR LESLIE. MINISTER THANKFUL "I had stomach .trouble for nearly 20 years, also constipation which filled my system with ga« and fever. I could not do my work, and while I was down sick a lady from out of town sent me a bottle of Mayr's Wonderful Remedy which proved truly wonderul. I btjf lieve it is the best medicine on earth. 4 ' It is a simple, luymless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflam mation which causes practically all stomach, liver and inestinal ailments! in cluding appendicitis. Oue docs will convince or. money refunded. Gibson Drug Store and druggists everywhere. Tfte New Hardware Store Have you visited the hardware store? If not you are missing*a treat. We have 3 new and up-ten date line of Hardware, 3 complete line of pocket cutlery, scissors and shears, tools, builders’ hard ware, house furnishings, bicycles, sporting goods, automobile tires and tubes, sole agents for Lowe Brothers paints and varnishes, a complete line of farm implements, repairs for Lynchburg, Oliver and Chattanboga points and re pairs, and-ail kinds of lubricating oils and greases. Quality feigns Supreme at This , •* 1 .•• Store. '~: RITCHIE-CALDWELL CO. 95 8. Union St. Concord, N. C. Adding machine Paper, 20 Ceqjs a 8011, 3 for 80 cents, at Tlmes-Trlb t: ' * . ; • v 'Xr.'z 21. The Dye Shop Hives Way to the Chromatic Scale \\ Once upon a time—and it wes even TSoso recently as ehrly this Spring, if one wished to be an exponent of the | 7 one bad to took *> if one had - f just stepped out of the dye pot. v- Ladies were known to come home in. f\ | yC\ tears from the shoe shops bcause no / x/ calves grew whose skins were ‘ the / I exact-shade of their acw dress. Hai\ / /A , \ \ gloves, hose and even amber bca^s / A’’|| til had to touch the same note in the / / \ || /p\ chromatic scale or they were consid \ v \ 1,1 t\ ered to be too hopelessly out of'tuna \ Y/\U \\ to he worn. V «| a l\ But .with summer come hints that 'Ss \\j/ Q H subtler melodies are to be the vogue, ([ -/ UA and the tnorc delicate art of blendinx 1 IffflT l \ colors or even combining opposite. j ill VA shades is being developed. Black and. L r white is sadly inadequate to show die 71 *" I delicious shade of nile green taffeta, I 1 1 a lustrous piqce from the South Man- L I Chester looms,, that Brakes the little II ’ frock in the picture. The hat is • I V L v dal) peacock bine yvith just a reflec . sfr . tion of green in its taffeta depths, the , - Ij| f ribbon cockade \>f Indian rtsl. White j I If - stockings and bronze strapless pumpa i li P , * complete the very original effect. • ( J . jT" The dress is made will) a very, SKEICgI f ( 1 mollified basque, a plain front with B f /j L-J I flounces that extend, except in the / Ll 1 case ,of the top one, wily around the collar lies with dcratre flhtnesa~ b«w % . . neath a crisp narrow organdie band. ♦lw A procession of very small seif colored A buttons marches dovn the front to be , stopped by a srrut’l bnt uetermihei, h-«- Immigration’s Problems Are Just Now, Interesting and Very Perplexing 1 . * By MAJ. H. H. CURRAN, in New York World. Immigration is at present interesting to everybody. And everybody •earns to have a plan to solve its problems immediately. People will tell you on the telephone how to deal with immigration thoroughly. At present we have an immediate, pressing problem: how to get rid of thousands of' immigrants weekly 50 that the couple of thousand arriving daily can be bandied. Two-Thirds of the immigrants who arrive in this country land at Ellis island, aXTd in the last four days 1 have been confronted with all the ramifications of that problem. During th# last week and up to Saturday night we will have handled more than 16,000 immigrants. The most we can accommodate easily an 2,000 each day, so you see that we have cause for work and worry. For those who can regard it impersonally this race for port ia a pretty problem in the nature of chess and with all the elements of a game of chance, because we never know exactly how many people we shall have to accommodate. But for those who are also- interested in humanity out problem is not merely a pretty and perplexing game. What we do means comfort*" or lack of comfort fat thousands, and I am in inventing suffering. 1 Not a question of who makes NO mistakes, Jnit who makes Ltatl mistakes Ofraonfnn t TktFkrm Journal. August ins 1 I f Enjoy thirat. ~ The cool, m delightful ,V* way is with the spark- Ungbeverage that’s hill Jgf of^t^-at^fountajßs Company. Frijlay, August U, 1923.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Aug. 17, 1923, edition 1
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