Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Jan. 13, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
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Co- e0O - ZJZ UlAJLTH it i : HI" 1 I - Local TaUv&oaA, K 71 . B'J T!p see. 1. ow-: Bis Months Three Months On Month .0 rCKUSEXS'S AJTSODHCZltiXT Advertising mil eaa be aad at ths if ( Copy for eaanges sws be " U 10 'dock a. av . - - Cards ot Taeala, Besolutions ' ftespect, and similar srtieiss ikwpl at the rata si 8 rt P tne-Caah U a MM ' Xstsred ss seesnd else sas2 auttei April 28, 1911 at lb postofflee el Consent, N. C, mate tts stars 8, 1S7S. - of the city aai by Bad ttt M bwlat prfeM m tk BtwIbc Ttik w vffl prevail: Ins Moat b Monti 5-55 Twelve Months fi JOHN 1L OGLESBT, City Editor. Concord, N. G, Janoary 13, lflll. 8TXLL MUCH TO BE WORKED OUT. Forty odd yean ajo the Soul li was left without money, without farm hands, without credit, Slate and eouuty bonds eould not be sold at any fair price; hardly twenty-five cent on the dollar. Only the ground and climate that God gave n was left. The war experience was a leu to the Southern people, even if ii was a bitter lesson it was worth mucii us. But we have not done all we -''iild have done and there is still n i to be worked ont. We have in the South the finest hardwood timber that is in the United States and not one foot of that tim ber should be shipped ou until it is manufactured into the finished pro duct. We produce three-fourths of all the cotton grown upon the globs and that should be worked into shape to be sold at from twenty-five ceuts to twenty dollars a pound before it is sent out We gend cotton to Massachusetts getting from ten to fifteen cents pound for it and buy it back at prices ranging as high as five dollars pound. We send cotton to Germany and Switzerland and buy laces made from it, paying as high as twenty dollars pound. The work of the South is to teach the children and young people how Lthmn ifciaw Vaadeo. Send,tha schools of the United States and for eign lands. Let them learn how the things are made and then come back home and pqj our idle money into profitable nse. Those Miles Books. Charity and Children. A great deal more fuss is being made over the mileage book question than it deserves. It is no very great hardship for the holder of a mileage book to stand at the ticket window And await his turn, like other folks, Some travelers demand special priv ileges anyhow. We have seen a few who acted as if they owned the train Of course the railroads ought to fur nish proper facilities and be ready to wait on the people who present their books. We have observed few agenta who are so slow that Job would lose patience if he had to deal with them, hat all these things can be adjusted without the Legislature taking the bit in its teeth and com pelling the railroads to change their methods. Mr. Tinley, who alwavs writes well, presents a particularly strong argument in favor of the pres ent plan, gives reasons for its adopt ion that ought to satisfy a reasonable man. When yoa eome to think of it. the railroads do not ineonveniece the travelling poblie just for the fun of the thing. They mast have good rea sons xor auopuog a pian mac tney know will evoke criticism, and Mr. Finley gives big reason which appears to thia writer as being entirely rea sonable. It may be said that we have no hileage book, which is true, but if we did nave we nope that we could till see toe force of a statement that bears the troth on its face. Spencer Furnishes tha World's ' i Tonngsst Grandfather. v Mr. V. H. Bryson, of Spencer, It sr't is believed, holds the record as the I, youngest grandfather in the world h his age being 33, says the Spencer cor- LA respondent of the Charlotte Observer. Ha was married when 14 years of age, his wife being only thirteen and a r. half. His oldest son was married at . i- the age of .17 and who at the age of .. !.' 18 years presented to the elder Bry- son a grandson, the grandfather be ing less than 33 years of age. Early marirage seems to run in the familv, Mr. E. P. Bryson,' father of V. H. Bryson, grandfather of J. W. Bryson, i great-grandfather of the younger niaving been married wnen v T The r"nd- "" -)-. ' .minis- funeral bein i.. a .....v ,4. Methodist ehurcli. - "Doan's Clu latent eared -S'.: srter-t ist had anfioyl rial I " 1 ' e ei're was pei s,.'' . -a, C"" ...j DID DA!I01T Ooo ITOft iTEPHSN & Kb S at Vest TlrctaJa. wha J reccatly, haa hd hM ram a great railroad poev aad 'ary of war ta Uw cabtoet f kt Harriaoa obacwcd ta the ,- miad by the raxaora a boat the oieot of hla aaafhUr to the of Ue Abroast He waa bora tt eewaty, oa 8t So, Uibar was farmer and aaoved he waa atlll a boy U Ulaaomrt. waa BTadaated frosa tbe mnlvantty -t etate ta 1860 and took ap tbe J of law.- it aa he waa-adaalttad to the bar a drtl war atarted, and Mr. Elklna show4 bja indlvtduaUty by breaking away from ale family and all his home tie to enlist la the unloa army. Hla father ana brother fought for tbe Coo fcderatea, bat he Joined the Mlaoouri Ulltla and esrved long eaoogh te gala the rank of captain. - Booa after be Joined be met with aa adventure which nearly coat him hla nr. with his brother he had left the Colon Unea to visit a woman friend of the family, and aa he was returning he ran into a. picket of Qnantrlll's gwerrjllaav They were noted for their brataUty and were known to sboot all their prisoners. . , 1 ; " SaTei j Col Tougtr. ifr. SBtln waa takes to tbe guer rilla camp and there fortunately rec ognised Cole Toonger, an old friend and pupa of ble. - Younger Interceded with ijnantrin for tbe future senator aad obtained a respite. As tbe guer rtllaa aaoved. off Mr. Elklna had to ride with them, but aa he reached the eroasroada galloped off for hla life. lounger held hla captors in check, and be escaped. Tonnger, after the War, became a bandit and waa a mem ber of tbe Jesse James gang.. He was Sentenced . to Imprisonment for life, aad years' after Bena tor Elklna not only helped to secure his release, but received him-at hla own heme wben he waa a free man. Before the war waa over Mr. EI kins left the army and In 1864 struck across tbe plains to New Mexico, then a bor der territory of which two-thirda of tbe population were Spanish, He ac quired that language In the course of a year and soon secured a large law practice. He waa elected to tbe leg islature and also served aa territorial vttomey general President Johnson snade him territorial United States dis trict attorney, and he was one of the few Mew Mexico officials whom Gen- oral Grant did not dlsmlsa. It fell to his lot a federal official enforce the act. congress prohib it 4bhU were J tl In New Mexico UMOUl til pwuo, Lwhe to ll Intern and purposes were enslaved ty th Mexican - resident. The abuse had n tolerated so long that It bad bee regular social euatom, but Mr. Elklna, la the face of Vigorous opposition,. Insisted on the restoration of these unfortunates to freedom. But besides enforcing the law he was amassing a fortune, i His law practice waa lucrative, and he had Ut ile competition. In particular he was associated , with the Maxwell land grant, which, through his loyal aerv- Icea, received the confirmation of the Ke-elcoted Despite -Deolination. Mr. Elklna first appeared in Wash ington as the delegate to congress from the territory of New Mexico In 1878. Hla popularity among the Span ish secured him the handsome major- QAirZA "Pleads Guilty ' "Givethedevil hit due" Bsd ahoss are not always to Nsme for bad feet Not all the Corns and bunions, tired and ach ing feet, "drawn" soles and in- KiuwingmiiisBr muoeu by bad shoo. TheiU fitiing stocking nut plead guilty to much loot murder., . . A Mocking too tight i ... la the foot may choke the circulation, bind the ' toes together sml bend ' them under.- A stocking too thick in the foot may cause the shoe to (eel too smalL ' A stocking too thia may bring yoa a blitter from ahoes thst would not rub U the stocking wars ntted right, A darned nocking makes a eora, a seamed stocking irritates the sole of the foot. Above all, if the dye in the Rock ing is poisonous, or not fast color, all feet troubles are made une reason why 1 V O . -JT . T" y - li. I ir"- ' o mw r ., LIFE T0 : COLE YOUIICER Ky et 4.000, and he was reelected fat a second tana while he waa oa a teat ta Karoo ta the face of his earn peat trre refusal of tbe nomlaaUoa. Hs felt that he could not decUae each aa honor, and he acquired ta hla term a aatloaal repatattoa by a speech la which be pleaded for the adm! of the territory to etaaaboad. While la congress Mr. Elklaa mar ried a daughter of ex -Sea tor Heary Oassaway Da via of West Virginia Thin alliance made hla acquainted with great undeveloped reaoureee of that aieantalaoaa state, aad It decided him to throw la hla lot with It Begai Acquiring a TortuM. After the expiration f his second wngreeatooal term, although be waa always recognised aa one of the leaa era of the Repubileana aad was a member of the national committee, he severed his connection with New Mex ico and lived for two years la Washing-ton. He found that as a westerner of national repute he could Htake mon ey by looking after tbe legal business of tbe great lnteresta wblrb growing up In the newly developed state. Next be became Interested la rall roada and turned hla attention more and more to tbe development of his wife's stste in co-operatloa with her father. Together they conceived tbe West Virginia Central, which winds la and ont of the Allegheny mountalna. It threads tbe Cumberland region and tsps a dintrlrt enormously wealthy la coal and lumber. Owning as be did In West Virginia hundreds of thousands of acres of tim ber! and and thousands of acres of mines, Mr, Elklns became tbe un crowned king of tbe state. He divided bis power with bis father-in-law, but In all their Interests they were united. He came back into politics sgaln with tbe nomination of James O. Blaine at Chicago In 18S1. It has always been supposed that the Maine statesman owed bis nomination to tbe railroad man from West Vir ginia, and fonr years later Mr. Elkins again tried to make him the Repub lican standard bearer. Mr. Blaine re fused, but It was only after he bsd cabled positively from Florence, Italy, that Mr. RIkins ceased to press his claims. In Harrison's Cabinet He is then credited with having had much to do with the nomination of Harrison aud tu 18U1 was invited by thst president to join his cabinet secretary of the war department. He held office tat two years and was the Inventor ofVhe term "post exchanges.' H aalil thai he nblected to "canteen.' 10 much of drinking, and change" seemed to him act title for the soldiers' club at an army post. Already offered-the complimentary nomination of tbe Republicans of West Virginia to the senate In 1801. Mr. El kins was elected in 1s95 and served continuously to bis death,'. He had of late been Identified with such men as Aldrich, but It was the force of ctr cnmatAnces rather than Inclination which led him to tnke. so strong stand. Curiously enough, while he represent ed West Virginia in the senate hi the Republican Interest, his father-m-law. ex-Senator Davis, was nominated as vice president on the Parker ticket This was, however, understood at the time to be part of an arrangement be tween tbe senator and tbe Democratic leaders and tn no way disturbed the peace of hla family. In ws call our atockngi . . . (tk "riitiiUliii 13 Bto-x-aA at as saviHiiuf the wordsd to- be the c! I I I II II If VTI f XLI is their wonderful comfort, due to their bring knitted on macnines tnat respect the shape of the human foot. At ths toe snd heel especially fr.'?tt)fnMM mrm kniHMf with attnin. cars tor correct shape not toaw. - VI "ght nor too tooar just cotry I and comfv." Made la several f nkkn, m c St sa w M rmrin MMMITi KHMMTpnilri t Wl,MtBS If Tea Eie E or Kalr T .U TO Airitue af this l. Ws eould not afford te so etrury endorse Bexall "9i" Hair Tonie and eontinae le eell it as we da, if ws were not eertaia that t would do ail we claim It will. Should oar esthe- iasm carry as away, and SexaQ "SCi". Hair Tooie not give entire eansfartioa le the asers, bey would lose faith in aa and oar statements, and ta rrw- queece our, basineas prestige wvaM suffer. : ,' t . - u , v v i i Therefore, when we assure yoa thai year hair l bcrlnainr a annat- arally fall ont or if yoa k are any seslp trouble,' Rexsll "03" Hair Tonie will promptly eradicate dan druff, ttimuplate hair growth and pre vent prenatare baladneas, you .may rest assured that we know what we are talking about.' ' ' RexaU "93" Hair Tonie is vastly different from other similar prepara tions. We believe that R, will' do more than any other . human agency toward restoring hair growth and hair health. It is not greasy and will not gum tbe scalp or hair or cause perma nent stain. It is as pleasant to use a pure eold water. -. ' Our faith ia.Rexall "93" Hair Tonie is so strong, that we ask you to try it on our positive guarantee that your money will be cheerfully re funded without question or quibble 11 it does not do as we claim. Certainly we can offer no stronger argument. It comes in two sixes,, prices 3U cents and 11.00. Remember yon caa ob tain it only at oar stare, The RexaU store. Gibson Drug Store. ' . Err if a Bemedv that Will Oora So- ism "W Prow II" Why waste time and money expe rimenting with greasy salves and lo tions, trying te. drive the eczema germ from underneath the akin when Marsh's Drar Store guarantees Ssno, clean liquid1 preparation lor exter nal nse to rid tbe skin of tha Re m life that causes trouble f 0ns apdi- cation will relieve the itching and of tentimes one bottle is tunic enr. to cure a minor case of eczema. ZEMO is acid by drusrr.fcU every where and in Concord by Marsh's drug store and they will tell yoa of the marvelous cures made by this clean, simple treatment. ZEMO and ZEMO Soaps are recognired aa tha cleanest and most popular treatment for ecxema, pimples, dandruff and all other forms of skin or scalp affections whether on infant or grown person. Will yoa try ZEMO and ZEMO soap on our recommendation and guarantee of satisfaction or your money back! MAltSU S.PKUti STORE. Eow'i Thiit ' ' ' We offer 0a Hundred Dollars Ho ward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Ball's Catarrh Cor. . . I . ' P. X CHENEY A CO, Toledo, a We, the ukdsrsigend, have known iFjChenei. the las W years,! we seej rv a sja issa arwa, wvhj etvuvs ewt in all bosineai transactions and finan cially able to carry ont any obligation made by hia pnn. 's !" v..--.-. -,. w a t mnn - ttw i t a ii i tjttt-vt HAUOAUf JUflilAM RiUaflll, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo. O, Hall's Catarrh Core it taken inter nally, acting directly upon tha blood and mucous farfaees of XS system. TestimonaU sent ' tree. ' Price 75 eents per bottle. Sold by all drug gists.-, i- ' Take Hall's Family Pills for con stipation. ..-. It is only 'a matter of time until some chap will discover a way to re- nature denatured alcohol " v A BslUhlt Oongh Uedidnt Is a valuable family friend. Foley's Honey and Tar fulfills this condition exactly. Mrs. Charles Kline, K. 8th St- Easton, "Pa., sUtes: - "Several members of my - family - have been cured of bad coughs and eold by tbe us 01 r oley's lioney and Tar and I am never without a bottle in my house. Soothes and relieves the irrita tion in the throat and lossens np the ooud. , 1 navt always lound It a re liable eough euro." Sold by Cabar rus urng IO. .- , , The average man - would raUtiher lose 30 on a horse race than pay $3 for taxes. ' . . . roley BMney Mis . Are tonie in action, quick la results. A special medicine for all kidney and bladder disorders. 4 Mar"1 C. Abott, nr.ik.u u xr 41T .an. ted with a had east of rheumatism, dne to uric acid that my kidneys failed to clear ont of my blood. I was so lame in my feet, joints and back that it was agony for me to step. I used Foley Kidney Pills for thret days when I was able to get np and move about and ths pains were all gone. This great great Changs in condition I ow to Foley Kidnev Pills snd recommend them to any one suffering as I have." Sold by Cabanas Drag Company. ' 1 t ' v. .J:" The love a man had for his first wife seldom prevents hia from mar rying again. ., ; ' . - : ; : Look for ths Bee THve On the package when yon baj Foley! Honey and Tar for eongbs. wons gen nins without the Bee Hive. Bemembet tli mmmM Vul a t, T Tr aw ml Ta mnA reject any substitute. Sold by Cs - barms Vmg Co. : , . , ; .-J ! 1 In -I rv.-n'I,M, P i -n I.L Ik-it C t:,Vi Jan. 15, 1911. tiiiittRXATICXAL SCIES. Teat of the Lessen. It Chewi r, t-la- atseasry Verses, 1,1 Tea II. CKre v 7 Cmintcy re- by Rev, O. M. tseraa. J Althettgh Abrjah, sea of Rehoboam, aaigaed osvry three years aad walked he aB tbe sine sjf Us father (I Klags XV, 1. yet tbetw Is SB n ChreaW xUl a retaavfeabte record of a great Victory which the Lord gave him ever the army .us? Jsroboam. whleh-'Was yaat twlct as great as hla because to refled spoa tbe Lord Ood of his fttbers. The Lard has often aeon Bt te do mighty tbinga for vary unworthy peopte for Hat greet same's sake, Jar. siv, T, Is very strong and effectual pleading. Our lesson today Introduces as to good King Asa, who reigned forty-one years and did that' which was good aad right la the eyes of the Lord hla Ood. ," He also dsfeated an army twice as large as his own because he retted aa the Lord (xlv. u, xrt, if. His prayer In chapter xtv,' 11, "has isften helped me: "Xord. It is nothing with Thee to help, whether wttK many or with them that hare ho power.' Help O Lord our Ood. for we rest oa Thee, and In Thy name we go." ? Tot la ths thtrty-stxth year of hla retga ha was ted Into making a league with tha king of Syria, and, being re proved for It by tbe Lord through Hla servant Hananl, he became so angry that ht put the prophet, tat prison. He seems sever to have got over this re proof of the Lord, tor "whsBxpttree years attar, he became diseased ta hia feet to did not seek tha LorCm his affliction. .- , . -r - v's.: AH the Lord's dealings with fits peo ple are Intended to bring them nearer to Himself,-' but to this day many be come so offended by what He does or does hot do that they turn away from Him and toss an fellowship with Him. Bom Of any' friends' know sosaethlnf of tbe rjreciousness to Siy seal of these words of tbe fjord through Hla serv ant Hananl; "The eyes of the Lord ran te and fro throughout the whole earth to a bow Himself strong ia the behalf of them whose' hearts are per fect toward Htm (chapter gvt, 9). We need such a word aa this so much, for the devil la always going to and fro la ths earth and walking tip and down la tt. As a roaring Hon he walketh about, seeking whom to may devour (lob i TilL 2; I Pet. v, 8). :. . Early in tha reign of Asa the Spirit of Ood spoke to him through A sarin b, the eon of Oded, tn the words of verses 1 to T of our lesson, referring to ths years past .whan ths people' had been eat of fellowship with Ood, but when ever they tn tpetr trouble sought Him "J' " found of them. Much of the messages takes us back to tbe days of the JdOgac : By tbe. Lord's gracious dealings with His people Is the past, notwithstanding all their sin. He encouraged Asa with the words. "Be ye strong, therefore, and let not your bands' to weak, for' your work shall to rewarded' (versa TV His ex hortation to as stSl and alwaya ta. "Be strong in the'Lord and tn tbe power of Hla mightr (Xpb. vL 10). aaalsoIss. H, 2S41; xlv. M; Josh, i 6. 18; Has n, 4, .and note by contrast TJaalah. who was marvelooeiy helped tUI to 1 strong, tot then his heart waa lifted up to his pwn ' destruction (chapter xxvl, 15, 16), The danger Is Our own strength or Self confldence, for it is only when wo are weak that we are really Strong (II Oor. xll, 9, 10. las. all, 13, la a grand word for weak bands, and, ad 'to works, bow full of encour agement la I Cor. xr, 881 Be, xxtt, 12; Luke xlv, It, are two of tha beet onrewarda. j.-v.: vv--; The king, tomg greatly encouraged by this message from the Lord, began to purge the land of Idolatry, area de stroying the Idol of his grandmother (I Kings xv, 12, 13), and to restore the worship of the true Ood. Tbe people fen to him In abundance out of Israel when they saw that the Lord hla Ood waa with him (verwTP). -They sscri flced unto ' the' 'Lord snd "sought Him With their whole- desire snd entered Into a covenant to seek tbe Lord Ood of their fathers with all their heart and with kU their soul (verses 11-13). The. flrat use of the title Ood "Al mighty,' which means "the mighty Ood who Is all sufficient," Is la Gen. xvll, 1, where Abram Is encouraged to walk before Ood end to sincere or up right or wlnle hearted. : From the book of Job. la which thhr title used more often than la all tbe -rest of the Bible, we learn that to know tbe Almighty there must be an abhor ranee and renunciation of self (Job xlU). This turning to God In the days of Asa was such a reality that they de creed that whosoever would not seek the Lord Ood of Israel should be put V death, . whether email or great, whether man or woman (verse 18). It might to a question whether this compulsory turning to Ood would, aft er all, prove to be a real turning of ths heart With us' It Is either life or death. He who does not truly receive tbe Lord Jesus' Is dead la trespasses and sins, a lost soul, but tbe good news' is that Jesus. came to seek and save the lost (John lit 18; I John r, 12; Eph. 0. V 2: n Cor. lv, g). If the love of Him who gave up all rf glory snd I bare oor sins on Go!.ba does not (win ns to Bin ws mast be deed ln- I deed.-" ' ' 1 ,The decliire clean cut man of tifalrs , Cankers and Professional men will find solid conservatism combined with style and Une tailoring in these SCIILOSS HOD ELS which we picture here. They come in neat mixed .weaves that are exactly suited to the men who will wear these suits. - - 'These are . J Two of the 8 NewWll 'Models of the ' SCHLOSS BALTIMORE - CLOTHES. , . There are Many J dther Models for : - Men and V Young men, OH & CC 0 Lonesome X7omen I 1 ''lyNtj ; tfyS mstaawBMtnaft- "To. n rulrwhni rn N.a , r '.., . , 4 y. '' Women living on farms and in rural districts haven't time to seek. and enjoy social pleasures. ' Distances arc too great the work is too urgent Women grow lonesome and listless when robbed , of these pleasures. - : -',- ' ; r The Rural Telephone , golves the problem. ; It enables women to talk with neigh bors and friends and keep alive to the news of the day. - Our free booklet tells ho) yoa dh have a telephone in i - your home at small cost. Women living in the country -should write for it Address v " : ' .. Fanners line Department SOUTHERN BELL Cl TELEGRAPH SouCi Pryor St. lj A i Cwwm.J VImL I bars purchased -outright a dry preparation for cleaning; ladies' gar ments that I guarantee to give - satis faction, or I will make no charge for tha. work, r I am sols owner of this preparation and on account of ths ex cellent satisfaetion it has given I make this proposition to the lilies of Con cord and vioinity: ' 6end us-ny ar ticles or garments yoa want cleaned and after we use this dry cleaning preparation o nthem, if they are not entirely satisfied with the work I will make no charge. , '" - ' fiespectfully, -' - ' 0. B. rOWEZXS, PsopristoT. Pkonsm , . - - DENTISTRY - I am now in tha Morris building, over the Cabarrus Savings Bank. , rt O. iXIIEXSOV 1 - , . (.- - I FETZER CO. TELEPHONE COMPANY Atlanta, Ga. - ' GOLOSO I! A Lady Who Lives In Co! Jsboro Joins In the Chorus of Praise - - for Cardul, The Woman V . -, ; Tonic. , 'Ooldsbore, N. C. "A physician treat, sa me lor many distressing symptoms," writes Mrs. Ltta A. Smith, "but cava me no relief. "I suffered wlfh neuralgia sround tha heart and was troubled at times with my head. I had pain in my left side, bowels, left thigh, shoulders and arms, "After taking Cardul, I am now well and can recommend it to other suffering women." .. . . .v,, . .-. Just such doubtful symptoms, as those from which Mrs. Smith suffered, are ths ones for which It will pay you to take Cardul, the woman's tonic . It Is at such times, when them is nottu lm to show, fr certain, the rrn I f m ,e ol ' ' ,r v-i-i ,..-c,i a t f- f-ue re IT!, r Take . . Miiiess, 4 keeps it ' '.-i J and u-v . i, .,. i H ' aM'".iniiiwt. :" any wucre, 4
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 13, 1911, edition 1
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