Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Sept. 25, 1925, edition 1 / Page 5
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I Friday, September 25,1925 ■ ;• ; jrThat Union County Mutilation Case. ■fall Tourndl BTct mysfer.v has ken solved. There Bere ,no hooded men or night riders, : Bnfifr was there a bunch of men ■nit upon private vengeance. Union Kunty has 'come out from under the | imputation of mob disgrace. TRe Win Mo was found Sunday a week Bp> to condition that suggested mob and / which condition •he Bkuped had been brought aboOtt by men whs solely responsible Br his own emasculation. -i- | was no crime, that is. there ki no wilful and malicious desire ■ wrong, ami there was no dhis step daughter did the thing ■ about the spirit that they would Hrt undertaken to perform any other which they thought they easily do. They were surprised H turned out rq bad. Fowler has done his work WM (he welfare department. It is work in its primary ahd sim- nature to see that this family ■ put on its feet again and to give and patience to seeing whether can stand. Should the girl be from the family? That is for experimental work of the department. There is no filr- MT Work for the officers of the law stage. .But will there be no . it will be asked. Well, is there to prosecute? Tlie is only to sw that this self- family can be helped to right and stand upon a decent foot- BBierenfter. And that is welfare ■am, not work of prosecuting officers. ■■Telling the Truth a Relief. Hlßeu Turner Blanchard the B|B<tory of the astonishing occur- had been the talk of the for a week, he was relieved IB great burden. A feeling came ‘ him like that of a man who has a great physical pain which hB suddenly departed and left him ■ng as relieved and comfortable its had never known the paiu. Like the man who has divulged an op- secret wjiich has been too ■ JBat for him to bear and telling of 1 ißich has been a relief no matter I ««t after eonsequeliee may be. Un- I iB such circumstances present relief ■ ißso great that future consequences | Bay take . care of themselves. B And Blanchard was as near happy .Is a man co'uld be under the cireum- BtanceS. Unexpected physical suffer mag hat] ; tjeeji assuaged by hospital care, m shock of idiscoveryj and publicity mad liassed and the subsequent fear )f some kinds of legal punishment wits tow past. \ This trebble. relief with the added one of having no longer any need to keep the secret and to uuder {o continual quizzing, was so great that the poor fellow almost became happy. And there was yet another reason Why he felt good. That was that he feels that he will never more be tempted to fall into sin. that he has Undergone such an experience' as will tngble him to hereafter have strength ib down siq in'all its forms, qs teciully since he feels that by clean ,-onfession he has put himself right svith God and will receive strength from on high to help him fight from now on. There cannot be the slightest doubt that the trutlj has come out. Per haps Blanchard himself is not fully aware of all the motives that impelled him to undergo such strenuous under taking. But one thing he is fully confident of and that is that the freatest trouble of his life is behind Elm and that no future hardship or Struggle for life and existence will ever be so terrible as the thing.that jhe has undergone. From this he feels purged, relieved, and to that extent his purpose has been achieved. Taking Up life Again. Asked if he expected that he would have any difficulty in taking up his life again with his family and whnt iis attitude tow'urds his step daughter VOuld be, lie said: “I think Marie iugbt to stay on and help us work. 1 have done everything I could for ______ , t _i_ » 57.50 to S3OO €1 fr v Navarre Pearls g II; —when the music begins | X-T the ball, with every woman anxious I I B JTV to appear to best you will £1 I* M find that the girl who wears pearls is the $| 114 center of admiration. For perfect repro- JJ IB* ductionjs of costly natural gems, choose fM I;K NAVARRE PeXrls, moderately priced and £jß Bi guaeanteed indestructible. Sold'exclu- £■ i BEL sively, in tbicsity, by Jfl if aCL , RT 4LKi PARKER IBdL I '-COMPANY JML BBfL SiK, v Jmk ' I • ■■ Imffi Mm 4IK! 14 UUW ATT nroju TO ■ aVßii liip9p I TIUUi U: n jPfc I IIJUVwIm I*v s \ ~ . fi"# 1 -- IL ' :-V ’ '/ vr-V" • her. I have worked in sleet with out half enough clothes cutting cord wood to make | living. The three children of my wife by ber licet mar riage have been treated just like my own. in Tact I have tried to treat them better. Wbeh I could hot buy shoes for all of them I have let my little ones go without, and stay in the nouse so that the others could have shoes. He have sent the chiU dren to school, and now I think Mnrie’ ought to stay with us and help us work for the family, as all of us have to work tp get along. Never life wilj I again have any temptation to lay hand upon her.< There were certain ways about her at times that attracted'me, but tb'at is over, v I went* into this thing to try to be a better man and by God’s help I can now." Blanchard is 28 years old, his wife is gbout 3fi. He volunteered in the War and was turned down for physical reasons, then he got married but was called out in the draft and wet to the arm. He was born in Bessemer ‘City inid his mother is still living. His father was killed at a cottop gin in Soutjh Carolina. \ Torture* Now Over. .Looking upon this helples and tor tured man and hearing his story of hardship and struggle and fear, one can find in his heart no cause to spurn him, no feeling other than a de sire to see the poor fellow is able to stand up again and face the world. Tortured for some time with ■ the knowledge that he was leading a sin ful life, every time he went to preach ing something seemed to hit him hnd to point the finger of accusation at him. He is a member of the Zoar Church down on the South. Carolina line. For a long time he (had carried the idea that the only thing he could do to save himself from his course was to take some drastic action in the nature! of pliujcing out even the eye that offends. Then he went to meeting in the court house and heard over and over words of condermna tion of sin. The words burned in his heart and he could stand it no longer. But he mistrusted his owii], ■ strength. _ He had tried before-and . failed. Pluck cut tile offending mem ber and settle it ail. Then, too. he hnd heard of such’ a case and the suffering was pot so great. It looked simple .and it solved the problem. And that- is in the state . of mind that all men come to whpn they have a problem too. ficep.. for • them to solve,' Something suggests . away out and IVO ’ matter how gro i tesqu* that way Ria.v seegi to others, i to the bewildered one if‘'seems simple ■ and easy, the rigjit thing to do. Hell . yawned on one side if ho persisted in his course. On the other was his , certain inability to Change no long as conditions remained as they were. , Therefore, do the -one thing that eiul , ed it all. It is upon speh reasoning , that men_blow out their braius and , women jump into the rjver. I And there was something yet that , entered into the question. There . were female jealousy and nagging, for , just cause, but nagging still. Though t Blanchard does, not say so, perhaps i tIFJ told him that he couldn’t do it, 1 , that he was not sincere, or that he didn’t have the nerve, or the real de yire. Blanchard hinted at some sftch feeling as this vvlren he said that you "J do things sometimes because you are I fretted. Blanchard and his wtisic family had . gone to the cotton field for there it e seemed most likely they coil hi make I more, -Up has had a devil of a r struggle to feed and clothes and warm I tlipse eight children. And he knows t that another struggle is ahead. He s hopes to get away some time where t the thing is not known and start over. First he talks about paying up bin debts, especially" for his treat ment at the hospital. He says that 1 he line]'a little piece of land once but s had to mortgage it and lost it. He t mentions the fact that he has a paid r isiiicy from the government of about >t a hundred and seventy dollars, and • then adds rather resignedly, “but it t is not due till 11)45.” / Won For Walker \ „ „ m m - ' jp. ■ ’ This hit of action was snappcd“ln the fifteenth and fiunl round of Mick ey Walker s fightwithnavcShadi' at the Yankee Stadium in New York. It shows the champion beating Shade ( Ibftl almost to tlie floor. Many at the Ringside believed the decision would go to Shade because 1m had battered Walker all ovqr the ring in the twelf th, thirteenth and fourteenth rounds,but Walker made a whirlwind finish and received the decision. Famous Peoft&e Just Like Other Folks ' Common Clay , * •Even as You and I” Famous people .pre •'just like sther folks, says O. O. Mclntyre, who, perhaps, is acquainted with a greater number of nationally and internationally famouss char acters than any other man. They' are just campion clay, he says, even as you and I. Tlie really famous' ones, he declares, do not enjoy a pedestal and are more con geious than we,, suspect of just how fleeting fame is. Indeed, he says." the has even found that most of them have a timidity complex. Writing in October Hearst’s, In ternational-Cosmopolitan. Mr. Mc- Intyre relates a lot of between- 1 —; ~i ■■ %Twins 1 Bom v Seventeen" Days - Apart * , IS ■ : ■ 9 BR^ <■ , ■ —— .'/ Ik - Bai j b {bßt wM. ■( i ; W i BBF ' 118 m ' s • - IMW >4-* Bbßi fIPL. ffjif -ij| ■■ **p ,45 m - (BBr }l \ - ■.. •>. ■■ <$- •jPt Vb . dm *CW :• HB - ; MWs, •j' W ■IB W- T' > MayhughTof. Toledo gave birth\io girl, a 'i^^^^eft^wtlghed^flveypqundgjynjjthc^bcy^tji^j^ l . mtmwm j THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE you-Vind-me ‘stories of men wbove names are known the.world over end tells things about them that are not generally known. For in stance, he gives it away that Paul Whiteman, famous jazz leader and composer, was once taxicab driver; so was Marshall Neilan, moviq magnate. He says Charlie Chaplin eatd at a solitary table in a faraway corner of a certain grill in New York and scurries frbm post to post like a scared)rabbit. Roy Howard, one of America’s big gest newspaper owners, likes noth ing better than to walk the route ever which he once delivered news papers. Ring Lardner, famous humorist, won’t talk among! strangers. Mclntyre tells funny inciienti of a dozen more of America’s famous ones, including George Ade, i Will Hays, John Ringling, Charles M.Schwab and others. “The lionizec playwright of the hour,” he says, J “is probably the reporter on a' hotel run of yesterday. The best j selling novelist may have been cut- 1 ting his own hair in a Greenwich j Village attic last year. The stagq i star of the moment often lean, from the glov* counter to spotlight honors at a single bound. Fanri seems to have away of sneakinfl ; upon its victims suddenly.” ************** 1 AGRICULTURAL COLUMN % $ £ * (Conducted by R. D. Goodman) * * * ♦ #;**#**HO****** Control the Peach Tree Borer With Paradichlorobenaene. Until a few years ago the peach tree borer was the most serious pest that the peach grower had to contend with. This is no longer the ease, as i this enemy can be very easily con trolled by using paraclichlorobeuzene. This is a white chrystalline substance having an odor like ether. When plac ed on the ground and covered with soil it produces a vapor or gas, which is much heavier than air and natural ly sinks downward. This material is placed around the base of the peach trees and the borer is killed by the vapor. It must, however, be applied in the right way and at the right time. The proper time to apply it in the upper portion of the South is from September 25th to about October 16. In the middle portion, from October 1 to 10, and in the lower part, from Oc tober I|> to 20. In order to secure the best results this substance must be applied very close to these dates. It is probably not safe to apply it to one year old trees, although many have used it on them without injury. An Ounce Is a Dose. The proper amount to use on trees two to four years of age is three fourths of an ounce. Trees five years old and up should have a dose of one ounce. Very old and very large trees should have one and one-fourth ounces, but this larger dose should not be given except to unusually large anil old trees. The average size tree of five to 10 years of age should have ' the one-ounce dose. The method of application *4 very ■ simple, although careful work is re quired. The first thing to do is to re move from around the trunk of the tree all weeks, grass, stones, or any other obstruction of this kind. After removing the grass, weeds, etc., make the ground smooth with the back of a shovel. The crust on the surface of the ground should be broken, al though it is not necessary to dig down to-any depth. Just remove grass and weeds, break the crust, smooth the soil with the badk of a shovel and one is ready to apply the material. Wherever the borers may be wprjs iug above the surface 'of file grodntl. a mound of earth should be piled up around the tree to a point where the Jborers .are working. ; U Apply in a Circle Around Tree. The, paradichlorobenzeu'e is .epijjt ’drdund' the a circle, jt is spread put In a band about one and one-half inches from the trunk of the tree. Do not put any closer or any farther away, and do not put in piles, but spread it out carefully to produce a baud about an inch or an inch and a half wide. When this is done, but a few shov elfuls of dirt on top of it and pack with the buck of the shovel. Use, only soil that is free from trash,; stones, etc., and put it on in such wuy as not to move the puradic'hloro benfiene. IJo* not stand back several feet from the tree and throw the soil, as this will knock the paradiehloro benzene either away from the tree or up against it. Do not pack the soil tightly, but merely smooth and firm it with die back of the shovel. Remove Mounds on 28th Day. Wlieu oue finishes applying tile ma terial. however, the job is not complet h—■*——— I ■——^ Renew Your Health by Purifica tion Any physi&an will tell you that “Perfect Purification of the System is Nature’s founda tion of Perfect Heajth.” Why not rid yourself of chronic ail ments that are undermining j your vitality? Purify your entire system by taking a thor ough course of Calotabs, — once or twice a week for sev eral weeks—and see how Na ture rewarss you with health. Calotabs are the greatest of i all system purifiers. Get a | family package, containing j full directions, price 35 cents; | trial package, 10 cts. At any drug store?. (Adv.) “It Makes a Beautiful Boom i At a Small Cost” “VTOWADAYS when AN every penny count!, we were delighted to find that we could uie Farbo on every room in our n»w home at only a frac tion of wnat it would coat Ao have them papgred. Everyone who has seen ou r home has raved about our beautiful walls.” For white wood work use Farboil Enamel Paint. A CRY JN THE NIGHT and tome one in need of im i mediate help. If griping pains in stomach or bowels, weaken ing diarrhoea, nausea, whe ther child or sdplV there is immediate relief from pain, ease comfort in CHAMBERLAIN'S COLIC wndimA^RMOEA Kwptt always ifirov toms* j, Gibson ont ««ofa. . ■ ' "I. m !—■ I ■ I I i i|Wi; u JiprX- 50-M Sooth Union Street. Concord, N. C. ' Modish Autumn Millinery Wear One of Our Stylish Hat# '. v> v /ij ■ Be perfectly sat- * . '■’> Pi isfied with your new < JIMEuhjjJI Fall Hat! Know that jmHKjjjßaLT \ M 'it comes from this Store where style, AA gß| quality, and value ’ &§ are outstanding. Jk Fall Colors * shades of autumn are "7 gP I reflected in these Hats. YSg —J YA f I . K They’re the kind that 'J-j Y | A S|| make women of all Y > ' a'i ages young 1 Note our . ed, because exactly at the end of the 28th day from the time the material was applied to three or four-year-old treds, the mounds should be taken down as a precaution against injury. On trees five years of age and older, it will not be necessary to tear down the mound at all, providing the weath er conditions are normal during Oc tober and november. If. however, ! there is a lot of cool, wet weather dur ing these months, it is recommended that the mounds be torn down from around the older trees the latter part of November. The mounds are re moved to prevent any damage to the trees from the unspent particles of pa rad i ehlorobenze ne. . Ordinarily, however, the one ounce dose will entirely evaporate 1 ill six to eight weeks, which makes it unneces sary to fear down the mounds from the trees over five years of age. Do not fail to remove from around the three and four-year-old trees. Usual-, ly all the borers are killed in three or four weeks from the time the ma terial is applied. L. A. NIVEN. Mr. Niven is the liorticulaural Ed itor of the Progressive Farmer. Par adichlorobenzeue was used in this county last year with satisfactory re sults, and all those intending to use it this fall should give the matter im mediate attention. R. D. G. “What kind of a store is that fel low over at Toad Rock running?" asked a motorist. “Well, he has Ford parts for sale," replied the at tendant in the filling station at Ten Degrees, “buys butter, eggs, andpoul try, deals in real estate, paints houses, marries folks in his capacity as jus tice of the peace, runs the post office, sells stamps, hams, molasses, etc., A GROUCH NOT WANTED. There is nothing so harmful tq suc cess as being a grouch. Stomach, liv er and intestinal trouble make one j groughy. Mayr's Wonderful Remedy will help overcome these and usi/ally gives complete results. -Our advice to everyone troubled in this way, especially when accompan ied with bloating in the stomach, is to try this remedy. It is a simple, harmless preparation t'hfit removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal ‘ tract and allays the inflammation which caused practically all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, includ ing appendicitis. At the Gibson Drug Store and druggists everywhere. £ 1 “KARNAK MAKES WORLD SEEM DIFFERENT TO ME” That’s How Well Known Raleigh Woman De scribes Health and Hap piness This New Medi cine Brought Her. “Oh, what a blessing tills wonder ful Karnak has been lo me.” declares Mrs. Evelyn Hagwood, highly esteem ed resident of 122 N, Dawson St., Halcigh. N. in telling of her heart felt gratitude to this great health '-builders for the remarkable benefit ti lias been to her. “Wily, never a day passes but what 1 feel thankful to this glorious medi cine,” continues Mrs. Hagwood. "The past five years 1 was so miserable I with suffering that life just didn't • seem worth living. What I suffered from stomach trouble no tongue cuuld tell. ( “The nearest 1 can come to desehb | ing my condition fs to sdy that it seemed ‘ like, there7Vas a mill or some l thing grinding away iu my slouiuch ■ for hours ■ after every 'morsel I ale. Why, l could hardly eat enough to I keep body and soul together, j "Sly nervous system just seemed to !be a complete wreck. I would he i awake nearly all the night, so nerv ous shat I t imply -felt like scream i ing, and I worried and fretted oyer PAGE FIVE and takes bonders upstairs, I reck on you'd call it a drug store.” Thougli ttie goose that laid the golden eggsi may long since be dead, - the American hen produces more ‘ wealth in a single year than all the gold and silver miners bn the world. . {test free]- Be Well As well as this help can make you All'medical science has lately had to confess a very grave mistake. For generations it has been supposed that cathartics stimulated torpid livers. ’ Now all physicians know that they don’t. But a new science has developed. It relates to gland secretions. That re search has revealed the fact that ox- * gall— a gland secretion—does make . the liver active. There is no doubt. Ox-gall has stood all the clinical tests. Physicians the world over prescribe it And countless people everywhere rejoice at its effects. Torpid liver causes millions of ilk " conditions. Among them are these: *’ Indigestion Kidrtey and Constipation Heart Troubles Impure Blood Bad Complexions High Blood Pressure Lack of Youth Torpid liver means scanty hile. And « that lets poisons form in the intes- - tines. Those poisons affect the health * and vitality of perhaps half the peo- ' pie you meet. Now ox-gall comes in tablet form, called Dioxol. Each tablet contains 10 drops of purified ox-gall. All drug gists supply them. \ “ Learn wrlat Dioxol does. Find .out what it means to really stimulate your * liver. It may change your whole life " and career. You are welcome to do this at our expense. Mail us the coupon now. Whitehall Pharmml C». g-W *• 598 Madison Ave., Jt* IT©© New York, N. Y. m • | j|l want to try Dioxol. * - If i ‘ ~ “ * a ' 1 ' ‘Dioxol is especially recommended by * Pearl Drug Co.” ♦ -» the least little thing. -Why, for two years I was so weak and miserable I wasn't able to turn my bauds to help my daughter one bit with any of her bouse wohk, and I was so miserable and discouraged I didn't know what to do. “And then finally I got hold of’ this wonderful Karnak, and since tak ing three bottles of this grand medi cine it just seems like I am living , in a different world or .back in the good old world 1 knew long ago when I was healthy and strong and scarce l.v*knew what fatigue uieaut. . -b “I'm eating just splendid now,with , a hearty appetite, and don’t know* what it is to be bothered with stool— , sell trouble any more. My nerve* are perfectly quiet, and nights I sleep * as sound as a romping youngster. Why. I have so much new strength I get real pleasure in helping with the housework now, and 1 can hal'd- - ly realize I'm the same person’ that used to be so near an invalid.' I feel that Karnak has given(m* s nswt” leitse on 11 ftp, and words 1 can - ueveb express uiy gratitude to it.” Karnak is sold in Cpncord «xelu-'j - sively- by ,tlie Pearl IJrujf Co.g indßi*n-»j liapolis hy the F. L. FjipiOi Drim .Oo.r m Mt. I’lcasuut by the A. W. Mobso* Drug Co.; and by the leading * l *—fUjfr:'* ■in every town, , '
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 25, 1925, edition 1
5
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