THE COMORO DAILY TRIBUN JOHN B. SHBRBXLL, Editor and Proprietor. Phone 78. SUBSCRIPTION BATES. Ons Year Six Montha $2.40 Tare Months $1.20 One Month .40 PUBLISHERS ANNOUNCEMENT- Advertising xates can be had at tbe office. Copy Ifor change must be in by 10 o'clock a. m. Cards of Thanks Resolutions Respect, and similar articles are charged at the rate of 5 cents per line Cash in all cases. Entered as second class mail matter April 26, 1910, at the postoHioe at Concord. N. I ., under tue ait March 3. 1879. Out of the city and by mail the fol lowing prices on tbe Evening Trib line will prevail: ne Month 25 Six Months $l-j0 Twelve Months S300 JOWW Iff OGLE3BY. City Editor. CONCOKD. N. C. JlNE iS, 191 The qualifications, abilities and ta ents of no new jndge were ever put to a severer test than -were chose Judge Pell, in the noted murder tria which came to a close in MecluenDuri Superior Court yesterday. That Judge Pell stood the test admiraDiy is me opinion of both lawyers and laymen His charge to the jury as generally re e-arded as a masterpiece, ltie sum mine uo of the evidence was entirel impartial and his explanations of all points of law that 'were involved, were not oulv sound, but so clearly women a to be easily understood. Almost at one leap, it may be said, Judge Fell has landed in the front rank with iuderes of the first class. Charlotte Chronicle. We are glad to note this expression reerardins Jude Pell, whioh is no more than we expected. His firs court was held in Cabarrus, and hi conduct on the bench won the admira tion and endorsement of all who came in contact with him. He has more than justified the high expectations o his friends and we think the Demo crats in his district should renominate him. Koosevelt the Ureat will arrive in New York todav. The event will be the greatest that has occurred in the metropolis sine Dewey landed there after ibis victory at Manilla. The Colonel has been away from his na five land a year and thre months and returns to it laden with more honors than have ever before been accorded a private citizen. In fact no poten tate nor royal ruler could nave re ceived more attention than has been given him everywhere he touched. His march has been a triumphal one, and he is in the eyes of the world the greatest man on top of it. The Fighting Blind Man. Newton Enterprise. Tiba fighting blind man was in town Tuesday. His name is John Mitchell. He acquired fame aome time last win ter by whipping a big fighting man in north Iredell who insulted him on the highway. He is rather slander and un steady on his feet and would not bo taken for a scrapper. Perhaps this appearance is what led the Iredell man into trouble. He has two little dogs with him. A string is fastened to a collar on each dog's neck and the other ends of the strings are held by the man. The dogs pick the way and the man follows. They brought him across Clark s creek on a log Tuesday, He carries a trunk on his back strap ped to his shoulders, filled with quilts and other dry goods which he peddles as he goes. The dogs trot a ong the sidewalk until they come to a house. If the door is open. they enter, and the mau follows. If it is shut, the dogs atop and the man knocks with his stick. Dust. " The MooresviUe Enterprise delivers the following dissertation on dust, "which iwill apply to other towns as well aa Mooresvifle: "After being " made of dust it goes against the grain 1 in some of as to eat dost, wear dust and breathe dust on just any old win- - dy day, but unless some thrifty indi vidual takes to sprinkling oar streets. .our doom is sealed for the remainder of our nataral lives (except whan . it sains.) If tfca town wouid boy a 1 sprinkler and furnish water, the bnav .acaa men could well afford to pay for -.. a team and soma one to do tho work, . in which everybody would share a . aenafiV Jose because Darwin claims thai wa diss andsd gram Mooters is n rea son for soaking monkeys of oarsehrea. Thar wra muty ways to do thing wrong, bat only one way to do it right, - : -:-"' - - Kindness is not wanknees. There is bo danger of overproduction along this line, Thera is a market Cor all V l.'pks ami food vtolesoms . -Ait thal esai tanked oat- REVIEW OF NR kh How He Won the Honor of Being the Most Dis tinguished Private Citi zen on Earth, By JAMES A. EDCERTON. Copyright, 1910, by American Press Asso ciation. J HE act seems to be pretty well estab lished that during bis fifteen mouths u b r o a d i'ulonel ltoosevelt has bug ged several lions and other big game in Africa and most of the royal lions and other big peo ple In Europe. Ills trip filled the Smith soulan lustluitiou with specimens tuitl the newspapers with scare heads. Of a truth he has been the most talked bout traveler who hns visited the monarrhs of Europe since Napoleon Bonaparte made social calls at the bead of the 1'reiich army. On the stutce of the old world the KTL is JSli j Copyright by Un derwood & Underwood. jKJr vF f J(af . :3j. ..A -tn.:.L. Ju"'.. Jr- otw jiw SNAISHOTS AT Mil. HOUSE VELT'S TOUR. t Colonel Roosevelt reviewing Norway's fleet. 3. Riding K prin It and Colonel Roosevelt and African buffalo J Q. Thm start. KSTDt. 4. Colonel has playiMl many star parts -mighty hunter, fauna! naturalist, col lege lecturer and tbe most distinguish ed private citizen on earth. He baa met kings on terms of equality. He has preached the good old gospel of manly endeavor with nations as his Congregations. In Africa be became a child of tbe forest and the veldt, kept going for tJoorrtstit. uul fcy osiwa. HT SWSUI15. ORIUltT ATO aOLLASU p. CMobsJ Rooamlt and the crews pcioos SC IWMM n .snocJCROnn. s. nu abb ss iiIiii Bill and Dr. Schmidt in iMr Ihv a Wttk Minister flisy ml The Ha-) -. - ::-!.- I " aiaht. tea or twelve boars a day, de- fled tbe fevers, waded through swamps mad shot all the gains that got In his way provided It was big enough. ,. la gjypt braved ma wrath of taa Ka- ft!" . '"M i - r -d HIS EUROPEAN TOURS Where He Has Been and What He Has Done. Kings Met on Terms of Equality. Uonallsts and spoke for the British government. In Kume he refused to meet the pope unless he could retain his entire freedom. 1 11 Austria he met on equal terms the euiperor unci Kos suth, the friend of liberty. In France be spoke vigorously against nice sul clde and iu favor of the homely vir tues. In Chrlstlauia he lifted his voice, already hoarse and frayed. In favor of peace, provided It be the peace of right eousness. In IVuimirk he walked the ground that Hamlet walked mid would have talked with the ghost as a broth er If the apparition hud dared put In an appearance. In tjeriuauy lie spent long hours with the kaiser, witnessed a sham battle mid discoursed on the fighting edge. In Holland he greeted tbe burghers as fellow Imtchmcn. and In England he accepted the sad duty of representing his country at the funeral of the king. Everywhere he was the same Roosevelt we hud known ot home, as keen In his pleasures, as un tiring, as democratic and as full of Information on all possible subjects. He made the name of prlvnte citizen h badge of distinction. As to the nuni' er of ktnfN he gath ered In his collection of specimens it Is impossible to be numerically exact, but to the best of my recollection he bagged them all except Nicholas of Russia and Alfonso of Spain. Per haps be overlooked them in the rush. But with these two possible excep tions he saw everything and every body worth seeing, went through Europe with an express train force that gave the effete monarchies nerv ous prostration, took the degree of LL. D. at Cambridge, propelled words of advice like a human Gatllng gun and made John Bull apoplectic by ad vising him either to govern Egypt or get out Cannot Escape Publicity. It la a great thing to be president of the United States. It is greater to be ss big a man outside the presidency as In It Some ez-presldents have raised chickens, some have become college lecturers or business men. some have been elected to congress, aud some have gone Into innocumis desuetude. Only one bag become a fauna) natural ist and tbe big noise of two hemi spheres. There is none like him; none ever was or ever will be. it Is Im possible that there should be anoth er like hlnr In this land or auy other beside the seven seas. Colonel Roosevelt went to Africa to escape publicity. Did be escape it? la It possible that he should escape it anywhere? When he Is absent people wonder what he is doing. When be la present they wonder what be will to next There la no keeping such a ont of tbe newspapers. If be to hunt for the south pole his erery move would be chronicled. If ha were to live in Zululand, in China or la Hoboken It would be tbe same. The reporters would And him out, and It they did not find him out tbey would write about blm snyway. Roosevelt Is a front page character. Tidings of aim run as naturally to display type aa tbe river flows to tbe ocean or the parka fly upward. Nobody knows how far he has trav eled since be left us, but be has cov ered a considerable portion of two con tinents. He has aoi been as great a traveler as his successor, but has prob ably enjoyed it more. He has been ear the least civilised and most civ- Used parts of the globe and has been J equally at home in poth. He has gone from the virgin Jungle to tbe ancient pyramids where Napoleon said "forty a iurlss look down opon us-" He has n ridden a en m-l In Egypt, listened to the rlddie ot the sphinx and been met by racing boat loads of American re porters on the waters of tbe Nile. He has talked volubly, explosively and en thusiastically from Mombasa to Chris- tiania and from Cairo to London. It was on March 23. 1909. that Colonel Roosevelt left New York by the steamer Hamburg bound for tbe dark continent On board he made himself most popular with the other passengers by bis democratic and un ussunilug demeanor and friendliness. He touched at Gibraltar and Messina on the way, but requested that all formal receptions be eliminated, as he traveled only as a private citizen. Id Messina he was greeted in. person by the king of Italy and was Touched by the warm welcome of the people, J Photo by AmorlfAn Press Association. ! COLONEL HOOSFVEl.T AFTEK KFCKIVINQ ! 11 IS DKl.Hl.i; KKOU lAMHIilllliE. ! which he accepted as n token of their ' thankfulness for the American relief work following the great eanliquake The one thought he expressed at this demonstration was pride In being au American and in standing for ibe time as the symbol of the country that bad helped these people in tln lr calamity. The Game Bag In Africa. The expedition landed on the const of Africa at Mombasa and proceeded inland to Nairobi, where It estab lished Its base. On the trip up if Is narrated that the colonel rode on the pilot of the engine. Riding on the pilot Is no uncommon occurrence in Africa, though not practiced much In America, for the reason that It causes one to collide too violently with the atmosphere. In the Roosevelt party were Hermit, the son and ostensible photographer, although in the eud he proved u better rille shot than his father; R. J. Cunliighame, a mighty English hunter, who went aloug be cause of bis knowledge of the game and of the country; Major Edgar A. Meatus, J. Alden I.orlng aud Edmund Heller, representing the Smithsonian institution, aud a small army of na tives. The party took several trips out from Nairobi aud shot enough game to make the Smithsonian insti tution look like a petrified section of Africa transplanted to the banks of the Potomac. After making the game scarce In sll the available hunting grounds about Nairobi the ex pedition pro ceeded by rail to Port Flor ence, on the shores of Lake Victoria Nyan za, over which It took passage, then . traversed Uganda, thread ed . Ita way down the Nile, emerged with a great beatlugof native tomtoms at Ooudokoro, took passage by boat to Khar tum and was soon on Its way by rail to Cairo and Alexandria, making stops en route. The bunt ing was con tinued till the arrival at Qon dokoro. Despite the extravagant no tions of . ths number of ani mals killed by Colonel . Roose velt, the slse of imw by - American Press Association. 1M. BOOSavBXT III ' raascc. the game bag was comparatively mod est, the colonel's bag containing only seventy-six specimens. Of course this represented but a small part of the kill by tbe entire expedition, but the other members were chiefly concerned with birds and smaller game. Colonel Koosevelt baa tbe following to bis credit: Rhinoceroses. Including three White specimens, : 18; - elephants, 8; Hons, T; giraffes. 10; wildebeests, 4; Thompson's gsselle. 1; - hippopota- mnses,'4; buffaloes. 8: topi 6; elands. 4; pythons, ostriches, leopards, harts beests, bobora, Inipallas. water bocks, each; tvebra. oryx, bush buck, oribia and kob, 1 esch. T-j GJ hi Receipt That Cures Weak Men-Free Send Nam and Addreta Today You Can Have It Free and Be Strong and Vigorous I have iD my pouetsion pmcripton for nervous debility, lack of rigor, weakened man hood, failins memory aad tan hark hmn.ht ou by excesses, unnatural drains, or the follies of youth, that has cured so many worn and nerv ous men right in their own homes without any additional help or medicine that I think every man who wishes to regain his manly power and virility, quickly and quietly, should have a copy. So I have determined to send a copy of the pre scription free of charire. in a olain. ordinary wal ed envelope to any man who will write me for It. Thin prescription conies from a Dhvaiclan who has made a special study of men and 1 am con vinced it is the mirest-actinsT combitiatinti for th cure of debt ient manhood and vigor failure evrr pui ujgtfiner. I think I owe it to my fellow man to send them a cop iu conndeuce so that any man anywhere who is weak and diRcouraged with repeated fail-, utes may stop drugging himself wiih harmful patent medicines, secure what I believe is the quickest-acting restorative, up building. SPOT- i 01 cm IN( remedy ever devised, and so cure hiniseW at home uuietlv and quickly. Just drou me a line like this: I)r A. K Robinson 48U'. I.uck Building, Uetroit. Mich., and 1 will send vou a copy of this so lend id reciue in a ttlain or dinary envelope tree of charge. A MISSISSIPPI ENTHUSIAST Mrs. Lena Greslum, of Clinton, Miss., Has a Few Facts to , Tell Our Readers About Cardui. Clinton, Miss. "Thanks to Cardui," writes Mrs. Lena Greslium, of this place, i nave oeen greatly rcnevea. "I suffered for three yenrs bam female ntlammation, and had taken medicine rmn four diilorenl physicians without mucli benefit. "I have received more benefit from even bottles of Cardui, llian from nil the physicians." lust try Cardui. Tint's all we ask It speaks for itself. It has helped so n iiiy thousands, it must be able U nelp you. Trying Cardui won't hurt vou. It is nfe, harmless, gentle in action, and purely vegetable. If you are weak, tired, down and out try Lardui. If you are sick, miserable and suffei rom womanly pains, lil.e headache. ickache, dragging teebngs; pains is de, arms, legs, etc. try Cardui. It is the medicine for all women. It is the tonic for you. N B Write to: Ladles' Advkorv Df ot . Oiltts, fVHK4 Medicine Co , CIuiuiiuokO enn., lor Sfitciu instructions, snd iA-ixitte book. 'Home Treatment lor Wooit'O. ' sent iu uUm wrapper, od rcuucfcU W 1 cured in 30 min JitCll utesbyWoolfard' A j's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. Sold by M. L. Marsh, druggist. or Sale Sum 1 1 H. ShtM-iill. Apply to J. tf. SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY. Schedule in Effect May 15, 1910. Oniikest line to New York, Washington, Florida Points, Chin lot te, Atlanta, Birmingham, Memphis, New Orleans aod Points West. Double Daily Service, with High Back Seat Coaches, Pull man Sleeping cars and Dining Cars. Trains leave Charlotte as follows: AITSOUNI). WBBTBOOND. No. 40... No. 44... No. IE.. .. 4:S0. m. . . 5.UU p im. . . ?:im p. ni Local Sleeper Charlotte to Portsmouth on 132. We operate double daily vestibule service, with through Pullman sleeping Cars, to Jacksonville, Atlanta, Birming ham, Memphis, Port Worth, Norfolk, Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York. For time tables, booklets, reservations, or any information, call on Jas. Ker, Jr., T. P. A., Charlotte, or address, H. S. LEARD, 1). P. A.r Raleigh, N. 0. Miner: mmt THE GLORIOUS MOUNTAINS OF Western North Carolina "THIS LAND OF TEE SKY" "THE SAPPHIRE COUNTRY" Where There la Health in Every Breath. - The Climate(ia Perfect tbe Year Round. la Spring and Suuner (he Rsgioa is Ideal. -REACHED BY- Southern Rai I way Solid Through Trains, including Parlor Car, between Goldabora , and Asheville via Raleigh, Greensboro, Salisbury. . Other Con venient Through Car Arrangements.' . ' " Summer Tourist Tonriat Tickets oa Sal . ' , ,t MAY 16TH. 1910. , i LET YOU IDEAS AND WISHES BE KNOWN. .J. H. WOOD, D. P. A, Ashevillsy N. C, , - R. H. PeBUTTS, T. P. A, Charlotte, N. C W. H. PAENELL, T. P, A Ealeigh, N.C j jellico CoaL Cut and Split Wood, Lumber and Plaster Give us your orders. ' We guarantee Quality and Service K. L CRAVEN & SONS THE NORTH CAROLINA State Normal and Industrial College Maintained by t he State for Women of North Carolina. Four regular Courses leading to Degrees. Special Courses for Teachers. Fall session begins September 14, 1910. Those de siring to enter should apply as early as posible. For catalogue and other information address JULIUS I. FOUST, President, 6-13. Greensboro, N. 0. J3ee us .A. bout that , Jew Bath Room. It will "Take sA.way the trouble and expese of Repair work tor "T"ears afterwards. Jtlumbing installed by us Ijasts TT a life time. IVffaleriul always the et. It ISTever Goes wrong. tj ver and vee us. 'Phone 334. 81 S. Union St. Cily Pressing Club D. B. FOWLKES, Manager. As the world goes around and around, Vou bear the iron ring of its sound, Long Pants made abort, square coats made round, Remember that Paul is still in town. Aifter the needle and fbs machine, Then tbe clothes are sponged and cleaned, OoaU pressed nicvly and pants in a crease, Think of the preaser last but not least. Gratefully, DAN & PAUL. What Everybody Ought to Know. That Foley Kidney Pills contain just tbe ingredients necessary to tone, strengthen and regulate tbe action of the kidneys. Cabarrus Drug Co. No. 1H3 9.50S. B. No. 47 4:44 p. B. TsV

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