Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / May 6, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
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I THE CONCORD TIMS. MONDAY. MAY Page Two. ! I i 3 i ' , 1 l.i $ The Open Door SCIENTIFIC NEW DISCOVERIES. By the electro-magnetic tdopraph an joperafor can exactly Watv fractureln a submarine cable nearly 30") miles Ion?. A fowr fossils sent to an expe.rt goolotrw enable him to accurately determine tho rock formation from which hey are taken. This he can describe a perfectly as if the rocky formation was before him on the table. J. also, in medical science. Disease has certain unmistakable slns or symp toms. Uy reason of this fact the physi cians ana specialists connected with Dr. Tierce's Invalids' Ilotel and Hwrgical In stitute at Buffalo, are enabled to accu rately determine the nature of many chronic diseases without seeing and per sonally examining their patients. In rec ognizing disease without a personal exam ination of the patient, they cU not claim to possess miraculous rowers. They ob tain their knowledge of the patient's dis ease by practical and well-established principles of modern science. Certain diseases dirplay certain peculiar traits. Subjected to scientific an: lysis they fur nish abundant data to guide' the. judg ment of the skillful practitioner. This method of treating -patients at a distance, by mail, has bet-n so successful that thr-re Is scarcely a city or a viiiiage in the United JStates that is not represented by one or more cases upon the records of practice at the Invalids' Hotel and Sur gical Institute.. Such rare ca-es-as can not bo treat d in this way, which require surgical operations or careful after-treatment, or e!e."4.rieal therajK'Utics. P-cive the servicesof thy most skillful specialists At the" Institution. . Dr. II. V. Pierce long ago established this Invalids'-Hotel an I S;;ricju Insti tute with a full Stall of-I'hv.' icians who were expert in their specialties. - These physicians may .be 'consulted, by letter, free and without charge -whatever, ;f you wish i specialist's -advice upon 'any chronic in lady. The st m; sysh m o: 'specialites" j.j observed as in the depart ments of a nedical college. The ri,iesor who would assume to Iectv.re in all depart inents with equal ens;? and preliciencv would bo severely ridiculed by his col leagues, and it is just as assured to sup pose that the general practitioner can keep himself 'informed of the many new methods of treatment that are being con stantly devieod and adopted in the several departments of Medicine and Surgery. People who have been patients at Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, HufTalo, N. Y., . have much to say in regard to this won derfully equipped Sanitarium, where all the latest electrical apparatus as well as electric water baths, Turkish baths, static electric machines, high-frequency cur rent, and other most modern and up-to-date apparatus are used hr the cure of chronic diseases. The treatment of- the chronic diseases that are peculiar to women have for many years been a largo vector in the cures effected at the Inva lids' Hotel and Surgical Institute. The violet-ray treatment, which iv another interesting proceeding, is carried out by concentrating tho light, rich in the violet. or chemical rays, from an ar.c light with a specially prepared carbon, upou any portion of the body that may bo tho seat of pain. Sufferers, from neural -. gia, sciatica, rheumatism, strains, sprains, .also from those obscure exhausting pains the origin of which cannot at times be -accurately determined) frequently find immediate relief from a single' treatment and usually with a little persistence in the use of this aid, comfortable health or perfect recovery iu obtained. 1 Then, thero is the incandescent light bath, consisting of ar cabinet in which tho patient is bathed in the combined rays of many electric lights. It has pro duced really wonderful results in diabetes, sciatica, rheumatism, obesity, anaemia, and somo forms of kidney and heart trouble It h;ts also proven valuable in chronic bronchitis", bronchial asthma and the various skin diseases. As a general j jiygieuic measure us euiciJiic cai sscoxce ly be over-estimated. ..... In medicine thero has leen rapid and real progress during recent years, and Dr. Pierce has kept up with tho times in that he has had tho manufacture and ingredi ents in his well-known -remedies improved in a modern laboratory by skilled chem ists, tho greatest care being exercised to see that tho ingredients entering into his well-known medicines Dr. Pierce's Fa vorite Prescription as well as the "Golden Medical Discovery " are extracted from the best variety of native medicinal roots. gathered with great care and nt the proper I season ot tho year, so that their medici nal properties may be most reliable. Great care is exercised not to over en courage those win consult the specialists of this institution that ho false hopes may be raised cn Fenso Medical n receipt of stamps Dr. Pierce's Comric .Adviser is sent free oi to pay expense or m.-ill ig only. Send 31 ; vmra'iii. siau-pN i..r ciouhmhiu. ATrito the Invalids'1 Hotel and JSurcrical i -Institute. Dr. II. V. Pierce. President, at ' uunaio, jn. i I llord son Caldwell, 1 I LAWYER 1 iL oi'-i-mcu imiikeu nuii.nixu. A C o ii c o r d, IV. C. iRNET NEST W. C. Maupin, a prominent man of Salisbury says a small bottle of Hornets' Nest Liniment enrol Lim of a bad attack of rheumatism and also that as an internal remedy for bowel complaint, there is none better. Foi sale by Drugists and all dealers: For Sale ! One 5-room hous on West Corbin street near Siting -street One G-ro;m house and lot adjoining ibo residence of Mr. J, M. Hendrix, on West Corbin street. 530 acres of land in No. 1 township c:i public road. Will cut to suit t"V baser. . ' r : E. F. WMQ7E REAL ESTATE AND COTTON. 2-27-tf. The .new firm of Cook & Morris will open a grocery, . grain and feed store on East Depot street next to Gahn-Honeycutt & Co, today, LNIMENT EXPOSITION SCHOOL FOE CORK CLUB BOYS. Plan to Have a School of 1,000 Boys Who are Prize Winners in Boys' Corn Clnb Contests. Columbia, May 2. One thousand boys in school together is not a rare siht but a gathering of one thous and school boys around a banquet board is unique. And when it is said that these one thousand boys are Corn Club boys, from all the corn growing States, what a, sight it will be. . This is the plan of the National Corn Exposition, management to have a great Exposition school for prize winners in the county contests of the Boys' Corn Clubs, as conducted throughout the Southern States by the Federal Farm- Demonstration bu reau, and the city council of Colum bia, where the Corn Exposition is to he held next January, has announced that the eit- will give a banquet to tiie one thousand or more boys at tending the Exposition- school. ;Tlie sch. (d will consist of the two boys in er eh county winning first and second place in the Boys' Corn Club contests. The school will open on Monday, January 27th, 1013, the op ening; 'day of the Exposition, and will continue one week. The faculty will consist of agricultural experts from all parts of the country who will be in attendance on the Exposition, which is much more than a mere corn show. It is a great national agricul tural exposition, not being confined to corn alone, and the opportunity which it affords for agricultural edu cation is unexcelled. Ti e boys attending the Exposition school will be quartered in a large building, near the main exposition buildings, and they will be in charge of representatives of the Farm De monstration Work. The boys will be organized into a semi- military or ganization, and - while the men of the demonstration 'department will have close supervision over them, it is planned that the boys themselves svill be given certain responsibili ties. They will visit the exhibits in the mornings and in the afternoons and will have parades, and will be given special instruction in corn judging, stock judging and the like. The boys will be asked to prepare reports of what they see and the best of these reports will be sent to the home'papers for publication. Then on Saturday night, the last night, comes the banquet, given by the city of Columbia in'honor of the Corn Club bojTs. There will be speeches 'by some of the most notable men in the country, and in fact it will be a genuine banquet, just like grown-up folks have. Prof. 0. P. Martin, assistant in charge of the Boys' Department of the Farm Demonstration Wark, will be in charge of all preliminary ar rangements for the Exposition school, and he has entered upon the work with characteristic enthusiasm and energy. CHURCH BUILT IN DAY; SERVICE IN EVENING. Is Painted, Papered, Carpetdd Furnished. Moving Pictures ana Are Taken. Spartanburg, S. C, May 2. A church, not a stone or stick of which !?va? stamlinS ft sunrise this morning, ! 13 being worshipped in tonight by a n -.-sat congregation that fills the build nvnn,! m-orflnwc'Jnt,, it hnd been announced by the mem bers of Bethel Methodist Church that theywouhl erect a building in one day", the "church to be known V.l y Bethel. There were those who doubt Jjed. liiit when more .than two hundred J ! workmen, well organized, gathered at jtho scene this morning it became ap j parent that the 'undertakinsr might .vibe. aeetnmlishpd It is estimated that 5,000 persons visited the building during the day. Motion picture machines played up on the great crowds and upon the building at every stage of its erec tion. Tonight 'the building stands completed, painted, papered, carpet ed and furnished throughout. MUST BELIEVE IT When Well-Known Concord People Tell It So Plainly. When public , endorsement is made by a representative citizen of Con cord the proof is positive. You must believe it. Read this testimony. Ev ery man, woman or child with kidney trouble will do well to real the fol lowing: J. W. Patterson, 332 N. Church St., Concord, N. C, says: ' 1 When I used Doan's Kidney Pills some years ago, they did me great good and I -have not been bothered by my kidneys since. I am glad to confirm all I have previously said about this" rem edy. I got my supply of Doan 's Kid ney Pm3 at Gibson's Drug Store and they did me more good than any other kidney medicine I ever used. I took them for pain and weakness in my back and they corrected the trou ble." For sale by all dealers. PricA 50 cents, Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, Jew York, sole agents for tho United States. . - - - Remember the name Doan's and hike no other. - : Mr. Prank Petrea has ,. purchased Mr. W. A. Stone's house on Church street. A SUTFEAGETTE TELLS ABOUT THE LONDON BOIT. Graphic Story of the Smashing of t Policemen Gczrdins Chicago Nero Windows, Etc, in London in; paper Offices. No General Strike March. ' of Pressmen. London. Mav 2. Just what treat- j 'Chicago, May 3. The union press msnt the suiTragettes who were con-men are iitfl out on all newspapers vieted of rioting in ctcnection with (except Socialist. Publisher jot out the great demonstration of the mill-morning editions with Hnkebreak tant element in London last Febru-jers. but the union wagon drivers and an- and March at the hands of the union news boys struck. The press British prison officials was todav told men declare that the publishers want the United Press bv Miss Alice M. ojon shops. The allied printing trad-Wri-ht, one of their number. Mis e are considering a general strike. Wri -ht is the daughter of a noted j Policemen are uardin- the news merchant of Albany, X. Y.t and is a .ollices, vnJ Indianapolis. May J. There vrill ft i e Wr-iht he no strike of the union primers j a number of rears Mi right a c " ; n,;Mm Jf HaS i'x, n AlnvnHland. Mi'rcotjn. in Chica-o it the pxuuiiucut . ..v then she wen to Pans where she, studied art. As a sculptor she earn-; ed by her own efforts a recognized . place m the xvprld of art olun-j leering to do what she could for the j -cause," Miss right went from ; jew iorK woioi. I . T X I II 1 avenue. New ork, wife of the head of the British- American Tobacco Company, was one of those present ed at the third British court by Coun tess Benckenorff. the wife of the Kuss.ian ambassador, who substitut ed for Mrs. Whitelaw Keid. ho was unable to make the presentations-ow-in: to an attack of rheumatism. Mrs. Duke was Mrs. Xanaline Holt Ininan, a famous Southern beauty. She married Duke in 1907 soon after his divorce from his first wife. Wal ter Inman, her son by her first mar riage, is now seventeen years old. She wore a beautiful dress at lier presentation, composed of white and gold brocade with pearls and diamonds embroidered upon the corsage. A manteau de cour of ge ranium red velvet lined with gold tis sue made a very striking effect and her ropes of pearls were much ad mired. - Mrs. Duke had been staying at the Ritz Hotel but toward the end of last week she went to Paris. The Titanic tragedy not only put an end to all Anglo-American enter tainments but sent most of the Amer icans away from London, either abroad or motoring for a change of scene. The corridors of the leading hotels which are frequented by Americans are marked by an entire absence of the usual gaiety. Instead knots of sad-faced men and women in semi-mourning discuss the heart rending revelations at the inquiry at Washington. For several nights the bands have been dispensed with, while theatre parties and pleasure ar rangements of every kind have been abandoned. - Senate Gives $6,000,000 to Mississip- pi River Fund. Washington, May 2. Carrying $S.- 004,010, in addition to the 'appropria tions provided for by the House, the rivers and harbors appropriation bill, aggregating $32,126,653, has been agreed to by the Senate committee on commerce and will be reported in a few days. The largest single increase to the House measure was $2,500,000 for the Mississippi river, making $6,000,000 for that waterway. Among the appropriations as in creased by the Senate committee ag gregate: Inland waterway, Norfolk to Beau fort, X. C, for a dredge $200,000; Cape Lookout harbor of refuge, $300. 000; Cape Fear river, $300,000. A Live-Wire Booster Here. Mr. X. Buekner, the ad. man, head of the Buekner Advertising Agency, of Asheville, is here conducting the advertising campaign of Cannon & Fetzer's big sale. Mr. Buekner has been in the advertising business 14 years. A rather remarkable fact in is work is that he is now furnishing copy for the man he wrote his first "ad" for. Mr. Buekner is also sec retary of the board of trade of the mountain city and between lines in writing copy he boosts his town. Ashe ville has the distinction of being the' first town that . ever created an ad vertising tax by direct vote of the people. When it comes to boosting Mr. Buekner is of the 60 h. p. varie ty and when he starts talking on Asheville 's people, progress, business opportunities and advantages he rec ognizes no speed limit. Not in the Race. A number of friends of Mr. A. R. Hoover have expressed themselves as anxious to see him enter the race for sheriff. When asked about the matter last night Mr. Hoover, stated t a representative of this paper that he did not intend entering poli tics and was going to stick strictly to business. From the decisive manner U; which he talked about the matter it was plainly apparent that he thought too much of his new spring Stetson to toss it in the ring and let some people practice houn' do methods on it. 1 It Pays to Advertise. ,f "Buyers were waiting for the doors to open Friday morning when the force came to go on duty at Adminis trator's Sale of the Cannon & Fet zer Co. a splendid testimonial to the value of printers ink and the columns of The-Times and Tribune, especial ly," says Mr. Aubrey Hoover, who further states " this sale includes ev erytMng in hew spring suits, straw hats, footwear, etcnothing reserved. THE STRIKE OF THE NEWSPAPER PRESSMEN. flUbHhers L-et strike breakers to take .trikinz union pressmen, I Went James Lynch, of the Jnternatinal Tvpo-raphical I'tiiori e said that tte printers th?ir fonlracts. f publishers frl'ere with the distribution ot news papers, following earlier inter: i - t. VUri the papers were torn up. VAPOR TREATMENT For Catarrh, Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat And Bronchitis. Everybody knows that - breathing IIYOME1 a few times a day through the little hard rubber pocket inhaler will in a short time drive out catarrh. Many people reuularly use the va por treatment 'at night in conjunction with the inhaler, claiming that it hastens results results. This is the vapor treatment: Into a bowl three quarts full of boiling water pour a scant teaspoonful of HYOMEI, cover head and bowl with towel and breathe for rive minutes the soothing, healing, antiseptic HY OMEI for any nose or throat ailment. HHOMEI is guaranteed by Gibson Drug Store to put an end to catarrh, or money back. A bottle of HYOMEI costs 50 cents; a complete outfit, which includes inhaler, $1.00. , Tragic Death of a Child. Kinston, .May 2. An unusual ac cident caused the death of a 10-months-old son of Dr. and Mrs. W. W. Whittington, prominent people of Snow Hill, according to a long dis tance message from that town. Mrs. Whittington left the child sitting in a., perambulator for a few moments and was horrified upon her return to find' the little one hanging, head down from the side of the carriage. It was presumed that the baby made an ef fort to get out of the carriage and in so doing was caught by its cloth ing in the strap of the vehicle and lieicl oy the teet, a garment twisted ! about lts neeK causing aeain uy strangulation. The mother was frari- with grief The Danger After Grip lies often in a run-down system,, weakness, nervousuess, lack of appe tite, energy and ambition, with dis ordered liver and kidneys often fol low an attack of this wretched disease. The greatest need then is Electric Bitters, the glorious tonic, blood puri fier and regulator of stomach, liver and kidneys. Thousands have proved that they wonderfully strengthen the nerves, build up the system and re store to health and good spirits after an attack of grip. If suffering, tv them Only 50 cenr. Sold and per fect satisfaction guaranteed by ajl druggist. Liners to Sail in Couples? London, May 2. In the House of Commons today Sydney Buxton, the president of the board of trade, prom ised to consider a suggestion that Great Britain should arrange with the United States that during danger periods and the time when icebergs were about great liners should travel two together within easy reach of each other. He added, however, that he thought the plan was hardl-v feas Tle. W. T. Gilly, a prominent dealer in Pennington Gap, Va., wa3 so bothered with kidney and bladder trouble that could not attend to bush-ess. He says: "I had severe pains in my back and kidneys and had to get up ten to fif teen times each night. Saw Foley Kidney Pills advertised and bought two bottles, and soon felt great relief, and was entirely cured. No longer disturbed at night hut slept till morning.' ' Sold by Gibson Drug Store. Titanic Dead Buried. Halifax, X. S., May 3. Impressive services were held today over fifty nine bodies of the Titantic dead, some identified, others unknown. They were buried in two cemeteries here. Dr. J. T. R. Xeal, Prop. Riverside urug o., ureenviiie, S; u., writes re cently, "I have been a practicing phy sician and druggist for over 35years and have sold aud administered many kidney medicines Irnt none to equal Foley Kidney Pills. TLey are super ior to any I ever used, and give the toom Dy uirjson urug store. It is a bit of rather startling news that the percentage of dogs saved from the wrecked Titanic was great er than that of human beings An iti?Linife:::r?w York Sun Eays that of the thirty dogs aboard th Titanic belonging to first capin passengers, about one-half were saved. Out eliig Price B U Y F 12 3 4 This is a genuine bona fide reduction sale, bv ::.c A trator, to turn the stock into money to adjust taining to the estate. Your opportunity to sa. ; things to wear you must have this season. NEW SPRING SUITS AT ONE-FOURTH OFF. $9.00 Suits for . f $10.00 Suits for .... $12.50 Suits for $15.00 Suits for $18.00 Suits for $20.00 Suits for $25.00 Suits for Every article in the store is the time to buy Spring k The House of Honest , ev.:---v ,-. (Gannon Those New Shoes ! We have the EEST SELECTED CTOCK w have ever hid. Tli VERY BEST of everything that's NEv AND GOOD in FOOT WEAR can aways he found here. Come in yon will adde the time well spent. V "They R. Ko ladies' Original 1 Other Values added to the ones heretofore rr.er.ti finish out the April Sale now going on. Dcn't n:i v All I ask is to look and then you will buy. IR. EC. Hark O R C A S H 5 6 7 S 9 0 reduced nothing reserved N A Footwear Pumps and 0.:-cv Fetzer Co. Values, Concord, N. C. ' Wear Longer" I BLACK. Specialty Store BLACK Y'S
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
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May 6, 1912, edition 1
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