Monday, Nov, 9, 1925
:' - uJt • , • '
[ CANNED FOODS
WEEK
«•• a ,
I Stock Your Pantry November 9-21
J . V;
| VEGETABLES, FRUITS, FISH, MEATS, MILK
NATIONAL CANNERS ASSOCIATION CONCORD MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION
G. W. PATTERSON G. W. PATTERSON, F. M. YOUNG
! Local Chairman , BLOOD & CO, W. B. WARD CO.
i # ; V* * . y
IRICH i VITAMINS IF CANNED-IT’S FRESH
TIME TO PLANT
SELECTED PECAN TREE
Campaign for Planting 1,000,000 Pe
can Trees in Western North Caro
lina. |
Raleigh, N. C, Nor.—9.—'The
campaign for planting one million
pecan trees in eastern Carolina is
again in full awing backed by the
combined forces of the Agricultural
Extension Service and the pepart-,
ment of Horticulture at Btate Col
lege. the - Pecan Growers’ Society
and the State Department of Agri-,
culture.
“The variety to plant is the most
important thing,” says W. A.
Radapinner, associate horticulturist
at State College. “At least two-thirds
or 80 )>ercent of the planting should
be of the Stuart and Schley variety, I
and these in equal amounts. The re
mainder should be Alley and Success
varieties in equal amounts. Those
growers who wish a variety of nuts
might a’so plant a few Pabst, Money
maker and Curtis bnt aside from
these seven, no other varieties should
be planted in the State.”
Prof. Radspinner states that the
source of the trees is another im
portant matter. All trees should be.:
budded and Prof- Radspinner reeom-i
mends the Pea eon Growers’ Society
or some reliable nurseryman who ]
handles budded rather than grafted
trees 3 to 6 feet in height
' be planted as smaller ones are I
usually weak and large ones are too
ro-tly and burdensome,” says Prof.
Dadspinner. “\\lien the trees arrive,
keep them moist until planted. Set
them in a hole three feet square and
three feet deep. Prune off the dead
roots and pack rich topsoil around
the roots. Trees from three to six
feet high should not cost over one
dollar each regardless of variety.
The trees -should be set so that the
permanent space will be from 00 to
70 feet apart each way and cotton
or some other crop may be grown be
tween them during the first few
years to help defray expenses.”
No Conflict Between Real Science and
Genuine Religion.
Winston-Salem Journal.
The coming of Dr. William Louis
Poteat to Winston-Salem for an ad
dres tonight is of deepest interest to
those who have been following the
so-called conflict between science and
religion. Perhaps the one best an
swer to Dayton is Dr. William Louis
Poteat, who, while being recognized
as one of the country’s outstanding,
scientists, is also a devout Christian
leader and a deeply religious man.
In an address here last Sunday, :
William M. Hendren president of the
North Carolina Bar Association and
a leading layman of the Methodist
denomination in this state, spoke the
truth- when he said that in order to
be qualified to discuss the Subject of
gUflence and religion a man must be
■ fully grounded scientest and a
‘Christian of deep conviction. And
Mr. Hendren added that it he should
be called up to select any one .man
in the state of North. Carolina sol
qualified, he would unhesitatingly se-
lect Dr. William Louis Poteat.
Both science and religion are deep
ly indebted to each otljer. This is
particularly true of the Christian re
ligion, and is recognized and freely
I admitted by the ablest scientists as
well as the best informed and most
devout Christian leaders of the world.
“Servants of truth,” is a delicate
characterization of scientists who
have made possible the radio and,
. through tlie radio, the further ad-,
vaucement of the Kingdom of Heaven |
on earth. In dedicating a recently 1
completed radio station one of the
outstanding leaders of a large and in--
fluential Christian denomination who
ia not himself a scientist, but, a preach
er, said that religion gladly pays trib
ute to science, and “rejoice* that in
God’s providence another page of the
| hook of nature has been unrolled, re
vealing to mankind the Wonders qf ,
the radio.” Thus another official ut
terance copies from Christian leader
ship that there is no conflict between
science and religion, that truth is
truth, wherever and however found,
and that scientists also may be serv
ants of God, says the Litera.v Digest.
“Religion and science.” said the same
i Christian leader, "reverence, profound
| ly the truth that revelation after rev-
I elation of God's wonderful handi
i work in creation will continue until
‘the crack of doom.” In paying Chris
j tianity’s tribute to scientists, he went
| on: • ' ' |
I “’Patiently, unselfishly, persevering
ly, in the laboratory and the machine
shop, on earth and sea, and in the
air, they have, toiled at their self
imposed taaks that ail mankind might
enter into -the fruits of their labor
and share the secrets of their new,
amazing knowledge.
“Within the memory of this genera
tion physical science has contributed
enormously to human comfort and
health arid life. Indirectly our dis
covery of the .buried'history and of
the secret law* of the physical uni
verse has brought ‘us even greater
benefits. Each revelation of science
makes it less and less reasonable to
deny the existence of the Creator.
The universe becomes more than a
massive mechanism grinding out the
fate •of creatures as mercilessly as
1 the mill-stones grind out the corn.
The thought of God and the immor
-1 tality of the human soul overshadows
' fatalism and despair. And now that
we have discovered radio, to use in a
■ new and compelling way the heavens
i declare the glory of God. HU voice
t is heard calling ont of the mist*, on
- the wind "and above the whirlwind,
i and through the thunder and the
storm.
, I “There Is a further aeknowledg
) ment we must make. Science, real,
I not false science, discloses to itsfol
: lowers a lofty Ideal worthy of the rev
i erence of every man. This idqal is
i truth, always, everywhere, at any
! cost. Without selfishness or passion
> or prejudice, at the sacrifice of health
I and wealth, of lame and friendship
1 and life itself, the real scientist wor- ’
I ahips at truth’s altar, realizing, aa
1> the church leaches, that thare can be
no vital conflict/ qr contradiction be
tween the truth revealed to man by,
God in the natural order and that
made manifest by Him in the super- j
natural.”
Because Dr. Poteat- is a distin
guished scientist and is at the same -
time a deeply religious man and an
able leader of Christianity in his gen- j
oration, he should be hoard by all]
men of Winston-Salem, and particu-'
larly by any who are having difficul
ty in liarmohizing the facts of science
, with the experiences of religion.
* The Center of Life. 1
Dr. P. P. Claxton.
In America at least the home is
tiie most important of all institutions.
From it are issues of life. In the lit
tle world-of the home, children are
born and reared. In it they grow to
manhood and womanhood. From it
they go forth into the larger world
„of society and state, to establish in
turn their own little world of the
home in which they grow old and die. j
Their memories linger around the !
homes of their childhood; the memo
ries held by later generations are asso-;
ciated with the homes of their man-1
hood and womanhood. Iu the home
children receive the most important
part of their education. In the home
must be established their physical,
mental, and moral education.
From the home parents and their
children go fortli to the daily toil and (
to the home they bring the products
or the earnings of their labor, to be
expended, wisely and prudently or un
wisely or unprudently, for food, cloth
ing, shelter, ami the other necessities
and luxuries of life. For mrist people
the home is the beginning and end of
life. All their activities proceed from
it and return to it.
Therefore, of all the arts those per
taining to' home making are the most
important and of all the sciences those
which find their application in the
home and its needs, are the most sig
nificant.
What Do You Think of This?
Edna May in. New York Mirror.
Medical authorities have discover
ed that there is a great decrease in
cases of anemia in young women and
girls. They attribute the cause to
the abandonment of tight lacing.
I’m going to list for you what one
medical authority cheers as great
improvements upon former styles of
dressing:
Discord of corsets.
Bobbed, hair.
Waistless dresses, which hang
from the shoulder and are lighter
weight.
Short skirts.
Open necks.
Bare arms.
Even rolled stockings.
The physical culturists point , out
that the unrestricted neck has bet
ter chance of being shape'y tnan
the closed neck. High collars, they
say, made the neck flabby and
■spoiled its beauty.
I agree, don’t you?
' Disease caused the death of twice
aa many during the Civil
War aa did wounds, but it was the
cause of less -than a third of the
, deaths in the World War,
1 •
THE CONCORD DAILY fRt&JN^
■JT
WARNS FARMERS AGAINST
CERTAIN FERTILIZERS
Mr. Sehaub Warnes Agriculturists
About “Doubtful Preparations.”
Raleigh, N. 0., Nov. 9.—Of) —Little
! or no benefit is derived from the use
j in the field of a certaip kind of fer
tilizer advertised to contain bacteria,
declared I. O. Sehaub, of the agri
cultural extoension service of State
College, today,
"It is claimed tli&t these fertiliz
ers greatly increase the crop# yields,
while tests made by the United States
Department of Agriculture show that
they arc of little or no benefit, except
to. legumes,” said Director Sehaub.
"these so-called bacteriological ferti
lizers are generally made up in part
of such substances as dried manure,
j compost, phosphates, potash, lime, or
prepared hurtius which if applied in
! considerable quantity to put culture
! or small plots may result in some in
-1 crease in yields, but in field practices
the returns do not justify the ex
j pense.”
| Mr. Sehaub says that it' is hardly
probable that many farmers will buy
such fertilizers, but that they are be
ing sold to suburban and city people
for lawns, and gardens, and to those
| who have charge of recreational
grounds, such as golf courses,
j The good effects of inoculating leg
umes with nitrogen-fixing bacteria is
well known, Mr. Sehaub says, but
many investigators have fried to in
oculate seeds of non-leguminous crops,
or the ground where such seeds are
to be sown, without success.
Sq far as is known now, Mr. Sehaub
states, there is no advantage in apply
ing these bacteriological fertilizers to
such crops as the cereals, potatoes, to
bacco, cotton, lawns, flower gardens,
or vegetables, except leguminous veg
etable crops. The director, therefore,
is warning the farmers against wast
ing their money on such ’’doubtful
preparations," and urges that even the
most striking claims for such ferti
lizers be taken with extreme caution.
One of these “worthless products,"
says, is essentially a maxtirue of ma
nure and compost, and sells for a re
markably high price.
This Section Gets Textile Immigrants.
Raleigh Times.
The long-expected removal of the
New England textile industry to the
Scuth seems to have started. An
nouncement Is made of the coming of
, a Fall River, Mass., manufactory of
absorbent cotton to Littleton, Halifax
County. Halifax is already the seat
of one of the biggest textile enter*-
prises in the State, the Roanoke and
Rosemary mills, over at Roanoke Rap
ids; but there is room for many more
. auch.
This section of the State may con
fidently expect its share, if this man-
I ufacturing immigration sets iti. Us
ually that portion which ia served by
the Southern Power Company is look
ed upon as the center of the textile
! industry; but the power developed by
I the big utility is already contracted
i for, and during the drought of the
) past summer it was found necessary to
, curtail it.
The Carolina Power & Light Com
pany'of this city, with its subsidiar
ies. and the Virginia Railway and
Power Company at Roanoke Rapids
are perhaps better fitted to supply
new textile customers straightway
than the Duke company, which is
having to put in a new steam plant.
These smaller utilities could not take
of the needs of the Cabarrus, Meck
lenburg and Gaston groups of mills,
but they don't have. to. They meet
the- demands made on them by their
customers and there was no curtail
ment in their deliveries by contract
during the drought. It is cheaper
ami dependable power- proximity to
market and better labor conditions
that have- headed the New England
ers in. this direction.'
Halifax gets the first immigrants,
but Wake and its neighbors have rea
son to hope for accessions in the
number of their mills.
Books Guarded as Gold.
London, Nov. 7. —Lining the walls
of ihe reading room anil three huge
galleries of the British Museum are
millions of books. Some are the only
existing copies, and many are price
less, Every possible precaution is
taken to guard these treasures. The
books are kept in strongly-locked
cases, from whicli they are never re
moved except by officials of the li
brary. No one may enter the read
ing room without a special ticket, and
a reader cannot obtain a book with
out first filling up and signing an of
ficial form. Unless it is a book of
unusual value, the reader may ex
amine it in the ordinary reading, room,
but if it is a very rare volume he
is escorted into a special inner foom,
from which escape, other than by the
authorized exit, wbuld be impossible.
In both rooms, men in plain clothes,
indistinguishable from the hundreds
of readers, walk up and down, and
contrive to keep within arm's reach
of any one who is perusing a special
treasure. At the first movement to J
destroy or multilato a volume, the
vandal would be seized.
Congressman Bulwinkle Able to Be
• Out.
Gastonia, Nov. 7.—Congressman 1
Lee Bulwinkle, sick abed for nine
weeks with injuries received in an
auto accident on his- way home from
the American legion state meeting
at Fayetteville, was able today for
the first time to leave his home. A
brace On his fractured leg and ' a
crutch js needed to aid him to move
about. Physicians say the ninth dis
trict representative will be able to
be back in his sent in Washington
when Congress convene next mouth.
Ottawa, the capital of Canada, will
celebrate in 1927 the centennial of
its settlement by Colonel" By, British
army engineer, who constructed the
' Itidcau Canal. It was known as By
town until about 1850 and made the
federal capital to settle the disputed
claims of Montreal nml Toronto for
the honor.
Thera are more houses 'in Belgium
■ today than there were before the
1 war. „
HALT IS CALLED
ON LEO PICTURES
Pasting Them on Auto Windshields
Must Stop, Greensboro Rules.
Greensboro, Nov. B.—Determina
tion to stop the activities of people
who paste pictures of women’s legs
on automobiles is expressed here,
with the city tax authorities taking
formal legal action. .G. M. Rose, of
the tax department, has sworn out
a warrant against the Greensboro
Nehi Bottling company, agents of
which stuck many leg pictures on
the windshields of automobiles when
they were parked- The charge is en
gaging in advertising without a
license. The city will endeavor to
establish the right to demand a
liiceuse tax for advertising. The
case is slated to come up for trial
this week. A. D. Cone, manager of
the Nehi company, is the defendant
in the case.
City authorities had their atten
tion brought to the case when T. D.
Dupuy, private citizen, secured a
warrant charging the Nehi concern
with defacing his personal property
by gluing one of the stickers to his
automobile windshield without secur
ing his periuissiion. The Nehi com
pany was fined SSO for doing that
it was pointed out that anybody else
whose car had ben so defaced could
secure a j like warrant.
Chapman Loses Fight; Must Die Next
, Month.
Bridgeport, Conn., Nov. 5. —Gerald
Chapman, notorious bandit, lost his
fight for life today. The State Su
preme Court handed down here an
opinion that there was no error in
the decision of the lower court con
victing him of the murder of a po
liceman in New Britain, October 12.
1924. His execution has been set
for early in December.
Chapman was convicted in Superior
: Court in Hartford last spring and
\ was sentenced to be hanged in June.
An appeal was taken and a reprieve
granted by Governor Trumbull pend
ing action on the appeal.
Today’s decision was written by
Chief Justice Wheeler.
I Patrolman James Skelly of New
Britain, was killed when he and two
other officers surprised Chapman at
tempting to blow a safe in a depart
ment store. Champan, fighting his
way down a flight of stairs, shot and
killed the patrolman and escaped. A
nation-wide hunt followed and he was
asserted in Muncie, Ind., last Janu
ary.
Carolina Defeats V. M. I.
Richmond, Nov. 7. —The Univer
sity of North Carolina crashed its
way to a 23 to 11 victory over Vir
' ginia Military Institute before 8,000
i spectatprs today at Mayo Park, be
■ cause it cod'd do tbre things »ur
. passingly well.
. These n sets were a splendid run-
I ning attack, am ability to intercept
• passes when deep in their own ter
ritory, and tbe faculty of capitaliz
ing scoring opportunities.
i ——
t .The Philippine Islands could pro
( duce 75,000 tons of rubber annually.
VOTE SCORE
District No. 1
Following is the list of candidates, with their votes published, in' '
this district. One or two of the automobile prizes, one S2OO cash prize,
one SIOO cash prize and 10 pet. comm'ssion to all other active can
didates must be awarded in this district. In case of any omission Or
incorrect district classification, notify the campaign department at one« v
H. A. Allred 1,967,800.
Miss Marie Barrier 448,350*
J. L. Beaver 5,000^
Mrs. J. Herman Laughlin 2,309,650*”
Stephen Morris 2,216,775
Miss Dorothy Roberts 2.318.600
Mrs. R. M Sappenfield 2,278,125
District No. 2
Following is the list of candidates, with their votes pnblished in
this district One or two of the automobile prizes, one S2OO cash prize,
one SIOO cash prize and 10 pet. comm'ssion to all other active can
didates must be awarded in this district. In case of any omission or
incorrect district classification, notify the campaign department at once.
Miss I.ucile Cline, Kannapolis 2,119,600
A. O. Maulden, Kannapolis 3C8.650
Miss Billie Sapp, R. F. D.. Concord 1,837,150
Miss Ethel Saxon, Mary Ella Hall, Kannapolis ..96,650
Mrs. Nina Stogner, B. F. D. 1, Concord 277,150
District No. 3
Following is the list of candidates, with their votes published. In
this district. One or two of the automobile prizes, one S2OO cash prize,
one SIOO cash prize and 10 pet. comm'ssion to all other active can
didates must be awarded in this district. In case of any omission or
incorrect district classification, notify the campaign department at once.
Boyd Carpenter. Stanfield 1,738,400
Ruth Fryling Marcho, R. F. D. 5, Concord 2, 13fny.
Ed. Gray, R. F. D. 6. Concord 2198^760
C. H .Lipe, R. F. D. 2, Mt. Pleasant 2,210.100
Rev. E. Mjers, R. F. D. 6, Concord 2,221,90 Q
Earl Cooper Smashes Record at,
Charlotte. . i
Charlotte, Nov. B.—Seventeen race!
! drivers going on the boards at the I
Charlotte speedway tomorrow after- j
noon for the qualification spin for
entry into the 250-mile Armistice
day classic, will have a new murk to
shoot at.
Earl Cooper, winner of the May 11 j
race here, and one of the most spec- ]
tncular race drivers in America, yes- i
terday piloted his powerful mount 1
around the mile and a quarter track
at a speed of 133.9 miles per hour,
bettering by eight-tenths of a mile
an hour the previoius record set by
Peter De Paolo ‘last May. De Paolo’s
record had been equa led by Tommy
Mi ton but none had managed to top
it until Cooper took the wheel of his
Miller special.
Official qualification tests are set
for Monday afternoon at 2 o’clock
at which time it is expected that
new records will be set. De Paolo,
- the little Italian, who already lias
. copped the 1925 championship of
PAGE THREE
—■ ■ ac
i the American Automobile associa-.’
I tion. promises to exceed Cooper’s
! record when he gets his Dusenberg
i warmed up.
j Milton, one of the veterans to the
roaring boards, followed Cooper on
the track yesterday afternoon and
although he sent his machine aroufid
| the track at a rate of 1331 miles an
hour he could not. go above the rec
jord set by Cooper. Bob MtDonougfcy
| Milton's protege, nl»o did a bit of
1 fast driving, roaring around the t
sauce at 128 miles an hour.
According to the last census (1920)
of the United States there were 1,-
91£t1.220 more women in this country
than men. In Greeat Britain the
census of 1921 shows that the pre
dominance of women over men is 1,-
720,802.
Ka'ser Wilhelm had a paper weight
on his desk in Berlin that had been
made from a stone broken from the
very summit of Mount Kilimanjaro,
! the highest peak in Africa.