Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / April 6, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
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::;jl:.lti J a. IHIIIILU I m aa4 Prc .1 T.lfc. o. T-r ll Muntfc .. ThrM MulM On Moat KltllUat AHKOCCMiT. AdWtUlnc MM M IS Ac, Copy fc caaa 1 VSlrSt TI?H -oluHo. turt similar arilrl w cre April t. "I ,nT j lliVk lJ ' cord. N. C wr h of Mai SJ VrjTl. tfc. THa. wlU awralli On Month .Jj W nonini M 1 WIT uti - C1r Bait. Coneord, X. C, 6, 1911. . While either of the entlemen who are the defeated candidates for the position of post master here would have made a good official, we think the reappointment of IVtmasner Buch anan will give general satisfaction. He as mad a eapable and obliging of ficial, one who, to Seak in common parlance, is "always on the job." His appointment is in line with the set tled and sensible policy of President Taft to reappoint for a second icrm officials who have mail aceepioWe record. WKh Brsia Bum. Saliahory Post - , Tfce bor of Pint Ert OkleO, who tire Mtt ftnitrV, bad areia wtorm 14 ytfly efuraaee kioa i'iaraaat Manioc of to kiad erar aaard La this shop. He had bra eat Annul will a yeaeg Wj and had ret am, to her home and in 1b th act f tying the animal it aed dealy broke tad lu. For sailee the bona sped along tb mew Coateord road wh a the apeed ef tee wiad, imt tag aa dpaating man; vehicles oa the rout without touching on of them. At the it factory acre ia Salisbury tb animal swerved aliffbtly from the treet When the buggy atruek tb (cnc;r( and was left, the wild fright en 4 animal eon tinning on ita journey. Reaching tb ear bo an Sonth Main street tiit hore stumbled and fall ou tlio track. Laying there a abori time i: spranir np again an.l moved on tow&rda its home with slightly dimin ished speed. Tb Sound Sleep of Good Heafta. Cannot be overestimated and any ailment that prevent it ia a menace i.. hnalili .1. .. Souther. i.au t.lane Wis., says: "I have been unable to sleep soundly nights, because of pains across niv back and soreness of my kidneys. My appetite was very poor and my general condition was much run down. 1 have been taking roiey Kidney Pills but a short time nnd now sleep as sound as a rock, my my general condition is greatly im rtroved. and I know that Foley Kid ney Pills have cured me." M. L. Marsh Druggist. Bride's Calendar. A January hriile will he a prudent housekeeper and very good-tempered. A February brio will be humane and affectionate wife and lender mother. A March bride will be a frivolous ehatterbox, somewhat siven to quar reling. An April bride will be inconstant, not very intelligent, but fairly good looking. A May bride will be handsome, amiable, and likely to be happy. A June bride will be invpetnous and generous. A July bride will be handsome and smart, but a trifle quick-tempered. An August bride will he amiable and practical. A September bride will be discreet, affectionate and much liked. An October bride will be pretty, coquettish, loving, but jealous. A Novenmber bride will be liberal and kind but of a wild disposition. A December bride will be well pro portioned, fond of novelty, entertain ing bnt entravagant. We have received the catalogue of the University of North Carolina. Three courses are offered leading to the A. B. degree. In applied science courses are offered in chemical, elec trical, civil, road and mining en Igineering and soil investigation) The Graduate School offers instruc tion in more than sixty advanced studies. There are special courses for those preparing to teach. In ad dition there are professional schools of law, medicine and pharmacy. The University ia making every effort to supply all the needs of our State and the recent appropriation by the Legis lature will make its work still more effective. There are 787 students in attendance and 84 members. of the faculty. The man who boasts of bis wisdom fa sure to see the reflection of a fool every time he happens to look into a mirror. A number of uncivil men bold office under civil service appointment. .V lerrific wind storm accompanied by a heavy downpour of rain, swept Anniston. Ala., and surrounding coun try laie today. Street car service was demoralized and telegraph and tele phone wires were torn down in sev eral places. An old cotton warehouse and several small buildings were destroyed. A Reliable Medicine Not Narcotic Mrs. F. Marti, St. Joe, Mich., says: "Our lit'tle boy contracted a severe bronchial trouble and as the doctor's medicine dirt-jiot cure him, I gave him Foley 's Honey and Tar Compound in which I have great faith. It cured the cough as well as the choking and gagging spells, and he got well in a short time. Foley's Honey and Tar Compound has many times saved us much trouble an, we are never with out it in the house.' M. 1.. Marsh, Druggist. A young woman in South Bend, ml., came out on the street one dav last week wearing her first hobble skirt. Naturally she was unaccus tomed to it and in descending the stepe from the postoffice she fell. A team ot steers sanding close by be came frightened and ran away. Be fore they could be stopped they had demolished the plate glass fronts of three stores and had the town in an uproar. Then a special meeting of the aldermen was held and an ordi nance passed prohibiting the wear ing of bobble skirts as being danger ous. Use Allen ' Foot-Ease The antiseptic powder to be shaken into the shoes. If yon bave tired, aching feet, try Allen's Foot ease. It rest the feel and makes new or tight shoes easy. Cures aching, swollen, hot, sweating fee. Relieves corns and buions of all pain and gives rest and comfort. Always use it to break in new shoes. Try it today. Sold every where, 25cts. .Don't accept any sub stitute. For FREE trial package, ad dress Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Good results always follow the use of Foley Kidney Pills. They give prompt relief in all cases of kidney and bladder disorders. Try them. M. L. Marsh, Druggist, Anti-Skids 'XTbaV AatVSkU I I StaaaaVarmMl I i. V Aiilili.. . X gmtm 7 ' aL. w V9 tr -, -S alTQ aO.,f IN STOCK BY Corvcord llotof Ckt Chop, lOE. CorfclnSt L.E. BOQER. f Lmbr traaN ,f f btoatXBaaibla.A 4 a . The Regal Shoe Co. Announces a Uqw " Policy That ViU Shake Up tha !ic3 Trarlo Regcd Priceb Here is a letter from the Real Shoe Comoanv that will bemn a new era in the shoe business. It will be an earthquake for the shoe . trade, but, like other Regal innovations, a benefit to the public, in which purchasers of Rqpl Shoes will first share. No concern having a plant and organization less powerful than the Regal Company's could dare to so defy, trade custom. But V . J " r r It Means Greater Variety and Greater Yahe m Rc& Sko&l 7 Rtgal AgmU and Regal Customer Evnyutkamt Boston, February let, 1911. The retail price of even shoe hereafter produced in our factories will be the mafiufacrrlrtt of that shoe, plus five per cent, commisawa and the coat of eOiog. X- Except that wc shall not "split" nickels, every price wiH be fixed exactly at it thus figures, regardless of whether it comes out ia odd or even money. Thus, if the cost of any model, plus 5$, ia-&L85, the price of that model will be $3.85 not $4.00, or any other figure. And tki ph&mmll tt turiud and certified by chartered public accountants mnd stamped on tlu thot ml UU tacUrj. This smashes the inunemorial shoe-trade policy of building all high-grade shoes to fit certain arbitrary prices. The trade .will, undoubtedly, rite in protest against our action, and call us "price-cutters. r . But like Regal innovations in the past, it will benefit Regal customer. In face of that fact we can disregard this protest as we have others. ' This is NOT a price cut, although the result will be to give Regal Shoe buyers better value for price than ever before. Regal Shoes have aivoays been priced at 3$ above coat ol rAajtufacture and selling. But, according to universal custom, the prices were fixed BEFORE HAN at $3.50, $4.00, $4.50, etc. and the shoes were built AFTERWARD to fit those prices. ' Hereafter wc shall regard the shoe as FIRST in importance and let the price faS where it wOL Regal customers will therefore profit by numberless small savings represented in the new Regal plan. And in designing Regal Shoes we shall no longer be obliged to keep one eye on the shoe and the other on a fixed, arbitrary price at which it must be sold. We shall now keep both eyes ON THE SHOE, to the improvement both of style and of value. Very truly yours, SfT- 4 I ;. This means an end of the arbitrary prices on shoes. These arbitrary prices have for years been fixed on good shoes immovably at $3.50, $4.00, $4.50, $5.00, $5.50, and so on; each price always a half dollar jump away from the next. If a designer produced a new shoe which could properly be sold at, say, $4.30, the manufacturer had either to take something out of it to bring -the price to $4.00 or to add extra and unnecessary expense merely to shove the price up to $4.50 Thus you can see that under the fixed-price system the customer often hud to buy and pay for tnoro than was actually necessary. . True, the difference was seldom large-2Q to 3(J cents at most and true, too, that in Regal Shoes the full money's worth was always given. But. what the customer wanted was TO GET A SATISFACTORY SHOE-rnot to pay a certain Mco. Why should he be forced to pay in half-dollars if satisfaction could be given in dimes? v Why must he pay $5.00 if all that he wanted could be had at $4.85? Hereafter, as Mr. Bliss' letter states every fytpi -' price will be made to fit the shoe, not the shoe to fit the price... If the Regal Shoe-builders produce astyle that can be sold for $2.85, then $3.85 will be the price. - Nothing will be added merely fc bring its price to $4.00, nor will anything be taken xmQ to make, tt ' price $3.50. The customer gainii both ways and the' Regal style-makers now have a free hand, unfettered . by tradition. '' ... .,,"::". .; '.'? : With ithit new freedom, and with di) whole atten- 1 tion of the .Regal organization fixed n standards of auality, regardlesaof the ups and downs of the -leather market, Regal Shoes wiU more than ever be . the best that money can buy. ' 5. In Rejal Shoes You Get What Yea . CANNONS FETZEK 1 -t V - ?1 Tbia is T1m Stamp Exclusive Distributors cf FOR MEM REGAL I Everything FOR TEE ; ' Garden ! PEAS, BEARS, , . ( CORK, &ADI3H, BEET, OAE2A0E, ; ' LETUOB, FABSSTFS, r 8AL8AIT, CU0UXBEX, FAXS1ET, OKXA cc:::t Bnua CTcnn Itoh nUaved b 30 miaetes ly T7eol. lora aoaniiarjiiouoa. KararlaUr fW4 by M. L. Marsh, Dranlat. Importance ot High Grade Sanitary1 , Pluiabins. - flood Plambine la ana f tea ataat hnpartaBt featarat abeat heaxe. Ten canaot asvs e Busy asre-gards ICS the hsalth et your t -nily and ynr. 't Tberafore tl t it eoet af ft lZ7 Plosabina ml'l ia re&'v ha hetl.h stserajves ae mCl tt m savi-j ia-repair. La, , - i,., . . ..'J,;''?;:-..-'-, tloaa trj, , :.r. X have pnrehased entright a dry preparation tor cleaning ladies' gar ments that I gnaraatee to give aatia faction, or I will make no charge for the work. I am sole owner of this preparation and oa aeeotmt of tbe tt client satisfaction it has given I naVs this proposition to th 1: ',.iea of Con cord and vicinity: Send as any ar ticles or garments yon want cloned and after we nse. this dry cleaning preparation o ntbem, if they ar not entirely satisfied wnth the work I Wi.l make no shsrs. ..... o. a. rcmri r. rions itx Mi:cc3 end Opening ct . j :AFridsy , eeVaf MaTeVaW ali ";ArrI17::i. -: POFHAM'S ASTKA RCIZZOT 1 givai inuat ralirf and an aburfnta core ia all cuaa ot Aebaia. Broachiua, aad Hay Fwrer. Sold by drnggua ; aiall oa . receipt of price Si.oo. Trial tarhair bf aaall IS eaata. WUJAH a CO, rne. C -v. ' : li 4 i LiJ . , at I am now ia the lir! t '''ing,' ovsr the Caharrae f - T & C 3." . J S LA . . " . i-V Pruotlr llmlt.il to 1 I ,r. No r1 1 irot Kittin . X. le T C.b.rrMP 'V. . n. I Oitio bunre: I to U a. at, aut 4 ta 4 if -V. . f, - i v
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 6, 1911, edition 1
2
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