! V! n C...-V..3 CutLY Tfu.Lw.E Ml V HI a. 14 HMCBinMI MTU. Oi Tr - Six Month . Throe Months 0a MphU l .!. 1.44 1 Advarttotaa- rate fa he ViJ.'t? . oAU. -Cor for ehansee eua he ta at Card .ol Thanhs. Reeolatloae of We . ,p3l and aTmll.r .r1W 1 rjchr atlhe rat of 1 cents Dr U ceah Vnierad ee eeeoea " ",r N. C andee th act of March . olt of too Hr aad hy 'he tallew- wtll mailt On Month Wx Months Twelva Month---- JOHK OGI.BBV- I .r. ... S.00 ... CUT Ballot Cneord. X. April 7. VJ11. " THE ENLARGED TRIBUNE. " We thank our brethren f the press from whose papers the olippinss ! lowers taken f"r these kind expres sions : The Concord Triliune lias been en larged to a seven-ri'liiiiin iaier, this enlargement having been mad iiwfi sary by pressure ( business on its ad vertising columns. As an evening pa per The Tribune tills the bill for I 'un cord and deserves to punier. Charlotte- Chronicle. The Concord Tr'une yesterday en larged from a six to a seven column paper in order to meet its im-reased advertising patronncre. The Tribune is"slwa's received with pleasure in this office and we wish Editor Sherrill every success possible. Salisbury Post, The Concord Daily Tribune has en larged from a six to a seven column folio, and lias been ireatly improved since Brother .1. H. Sherrill took oharjre of it. We rejoice at this evi dence of prosperity, and hope it will cantinue with increasing satisfaction toifs esteemed editor i.nd proprietor. Durham Sun. IS TEE C0TT05 BELT. ... CWlotr Chronicle. ' ' la it review of Ike aether aad th jrV, I Wo. a Picavaa reports thai thai pest week baa beaa a favorable oae froaaaa agricultural point of tf. The Ana raia of the preceding week vara followed by far ther rains, ao that aatple moisture has bow been had orsr the tatir eotton section, la Tys th raia hara been xoore abandaBt in some tee t ions than in years, tbs pound having -received soeh a thorough soak ing that there will be reserve of moisture io resist the effects of any drought that may be experienced dur ing the summer. While the rains de layed field work temporarily, clear weather during the latter part of the week has enabled farmers to vigorous ly prosecute the work of preparing the Helds and planting. Temperature have heen rather too low for the best interest of cotton already up, but it has not been cold enough where the crop lias already apeaied above the ground to do anv damage. Encourag ed by ihe high prices that have pre vailed for cotton during the past sea son, farmers are anxious to plant a arge acreage, and the recent abund ant rains have helped thai intention. 1 he purchase of fertilizers, mules and farm implements have been on quite laisre scale, indicating plainlv the pniK)se of farmers to increase acre- e. Whether thev will be able to carrv their intention into effect will lppend largely iiHn the weaiher dur ing ihe spring, but it nuisi be admit ted thai rondilioiis so far Jaave t'avor- I crop plants. While there is no dotibi of the pnr- ise ol producers to increase cotton acreage, there is an equally pronounc ed purpose ;i cultivate an increased acreage of corn. The weather has been rather too cud for the corn al ready planted and up. but there is still ample lime, and farmers are making most of the prevailing favor able weather. The eyes of the cut in Middle West are on the Caroliuas as never before since the davs of the Civil War. The people in the Slates bordering on t he Mississippi are largely resiless and seeking homes where they can secure more land and make an honest living on the farm. These ates bordering - on toe Sottth Atlantic are coming int. their own. Here cotton corn, wheat 'less expense and more the climate is 'much more azreeble. The" oroblem ' .... . . ; wmcn laces tnenoutn Atlantic Mates i that of reaching the restless home seekers of the middle West. The "only difficulty facing the Southern farmer is the problem of knowledge. This ''difficulty is being rapidly overcome and the Southern farmer is learning that with the proper fertilization and preparation their farms will become in reality ihe garden spots of the world. By the results of the municipal elec tions last Tuesday throughout the Country the Democratic wave, which wept over the nation last fall, seems not to have receded. Advertising Will Sell Anything. 9. N. MeKinney in Leslie's, r. I believe that today there is no product ;of eral merit .thai cannot in - some way be profitably advertised. I have no hesitation in stating my be lief that if the United States Steel t Corporation had spent a million dol lars a year in advertising in news papers, showing people who Jiave as . yet never thought of using them the - possibility of the profitable use of many of heir products, their sales ; : would have been increased to a point ; where it would not have been neces sary to eut off the dividends on the , stoek. I. believe the day is coming . when the great insurance companies Vwill-iearri that advertising is a science as deep insurance and that there are , possibilities in the use of newspaper advertising of which as. yet they lava never dreamed. ' So I might' go .. on through various lines of business. Informant Voluntarily Testifies to the Senate Committee. Springfield, III.. April .". Clarence S. i'uiik, general manager of the International Uarvesier Company, before the Stale Senate bribery in vestigating comiuitte. today explod ed the biggest sensation of the l.ori uier bribery case. Mr. Fung testified that Edward llines. of Chicago, millionaire lum ber dealer, asked him as a manager of the Harvester Company to con tribute $10,000 to reinhiirse certain men who had pnt up a $100,000 "slush fuud to elect WiHiaiu Lori- mer to the United States Senate. - ean be grown and wfth less labor ;ndlnamedEdwrd Tilden, wealthy Chi cago packer, as the collecter of this tund to reimburse the men, who as Mr. llines was quoted as having said, had "underwritten" the election of rxirimer. Mr. Funk declared that his object in giving testimony was to save "H. H. Kohlsaat,, publisher of The Chi cago Record-Herald, from a possible jail sentence as a result of Mr. Kohl saat 's refusal to give certain informa tion demanded bv the committee last week." " Mothers of Great Men. From Leslie's. Mr. Carnegie freel talks of his humble beginnings and oints out that the rewards for labor when he started to make his way in the world were much smaller than they are now. In one degree or anothej, advancement and prosperity are today, as always, within reach of intelligent industry, sincerity and persisience. Mr. Car negie is a fine example of the men ris en to affluence who tell their exper ience for i he guidance and encourage ment of their fellows. Most of the world's great men owe much to the mothers. Waslriugton often pointed out the influence which his mother had in shaping his early career. Cromwell, the elder Pitt, Napoleon and other illustrious men did like wise. Oarfield and McKinley, on en tering the presidency, took the oath of office on the Bibles which were pre sented to .them by their mothers. Good resulis always follow the use of Foley Kidney Pills. They give prompt relief in all eases of kidney and bladder disorders. Try them. M. L. Marsh, Druggist, The' man with a single idea cer tainly must be a confirmed bachelor. " $ -Si& ten a. Zo.sct the sights witnessed In the Arena of The Smith Greater Shows. Here all week MwuW.wU;,. su ssLs Va S r'o. " a a ) " Q 0 . The Regal Shoe CoAnnouncco a Ncv ; - Pioliqr That Will Stake Up the SIico-Trcrls' v Regal Prices Are Now $3 to $5 Here is a letter from the Regal Shoe Company that .will begin 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 Regal 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 It Means Greater Variety and Greater Value1 in Regal rSk Jnah Even To Regal Agtntt and Regal Customer Everywhere t Boston, February 1st, 1911. The retail price of every shoe hereafter produced in our factories will be the manufacturing cost of that shoe, plus five per cent, commission and the cost of selling. - , Except that we shall not "split" nickels, every price will be fixed exactly at h thus figures, regardless of whether it comes out in odd or even money. Thus, if the cost of any model, plus 5, is $3.85; the price of that model will be $3.85 not $4.00, or any other figure. And ikit price will bt tritit4 and certified by chartered public accountants and stamped m tke that el Ike (actory. This smashes the immemorial shoe-trade policy of building all high-grade shoes to fit certain arbitrary prices.. The trade will, undoubtedly, rise in protest' against our action, and CsH as ''price-cutters." But hke Regal innovations in the past, it will benefit Regal customers.' In fact of that fact we can disregard this protest as we have others. This is NOT t price cut, although the result will be to give Regal Shoe buyers better value for price than ever before. Regal Shoes have always been priced at S above cost- of manufacture -and telling. Bat, according to universal custom, the prices were fixed BEFOREHAND at $3.50, $4.00, $4.50, etc and the shoes were built AFTERWARD to fit those prices. - Hereafter we shall regard the shoe as FIRST in importance and let the price fall where it WuV 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 1 on a fixed, arbitrary price at which it must be sold. We shall now keep both eyes ON THE .SHOE, to the improvement Dgta i style ana ol value. ,, Very truly yours, MAaHuw Dirmlat i i i V if vat Skat V" iltfat Skat Campamy. Do You Realize Vhat-This Bomkhsll Lcucr faeans? : This means an ena of the arbitrary orlcei on ihoet. to bar a certain 6r(C4. WhV should he be forced These arbitrary prices have fpr years been fixed 'ia.rAimef Why must he Day. UMWUaatJk&l JL Kit : '.-T.-' ' A a Vkaa'V ' . ' wantea could De nao at yk.ixt .-. on eood 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 arid unnecessary , expense merely to shove the price up to $4.50. Thus you can see that under the fixed-price system the customer often had to buy and my' for mor r: than was actually necessary. True, the difference was seldom large 20 to 30 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-not ." Hereafter, at Mr. Bliss letter itatet , every Regal-. price will be made to'fit the shoe; not the shoe to fit so;. ; the price. - If the Repeal Shoebuildenirdduce a ityl&J-W'-that can be sold for $3.85, then $35 will fte'the price Nothing will be added merely to bringjits price itX.j?A ' $4.00,' nor will anything' be taken' put o; make its,-.'-, Srice $30. -The customer gains both ways and the : " f .; .egal stylennaken now have a free hand, unfettered ,, J. by tradition. ) i fv, ,- .-k : With thia new freedom, and with &iib Mtnr&s$$:M tionof the' Regal organization "fixed on standards ? ot quality, regardless or the ups and down ot tne i -p ' lonrhor mnrlro Bn1 Sluui unit mAM than vrf tr,' : -I"'-.-: the bet that money can buy . ; This is Tke Sump In Regal Shoes You Get What Yovt Want find Pay Only fcr What YcuGct . Excluzivn Dhtribhiorsr cf r. a . ' ,r. -." rr-ii I r-J t '!. ;.- ro?, vi Jik-Tvfta Everything : FOB THE Garden ! TUB, BEAKS, CORK, BADISH, BEET, CABBAOE, , LETUCE, PABSNIPS, 8AL8AF7, ODOTTMBEB. PARS LET, OKBA an:::: lzvz ziozz For 8ala The realdsnes ot tbs 1st J. B. CaldwsH JboK. PatUraoa Co. Utt Importance s; ot -1 ligh Grade Sanitary Plumbing. Good Plumbing la one of the moat important teatoras aboat boose. Yoa eaaaot have to saaoy aafa-guards fu the health et your family end yoaN salt Tbsrsfors tbs ai:-!.t eoat at tbs tZZt Plambing will U reality bs health assaraaee as nsll aa a saving U repair billa. . ' usttasy nm:3 ca Cily Pre:!:: I have ' pnrehased eatright S dry preparation for cleaning; ladies' gar nenta that I guarantee to give satis, faction, or I will make m charge for the work.- I aa sols owner of thia preparation and on account of the ex cellent satisfaction It has given I make thia proposition to thi lilies of Con cord and vicinity i. Saad as any . ar ticles or garments yon want cleaned and after we nse thia dry cleaning preparation e ntbem, if they are not entirety satisfied wilb the work I. will make no elar;s.-' , -' : . ' , . . ' ' o. b. rcrirs, r.:Vt f . Thons 1SI . V I p"y-v Charlotte; N. C, jranuarv I, ttlk Chanaa of schedule 8 A BOARD AIR LINB, effective nooa Sunday, January 14. w..tboun trains leave CharlutU as follows, dallrt No. 41, datlr. p. Wl - . .' " Eaateoand, dallyr , i . - .:-. ; ' No. 40, dally, t'M a, m. , Na 41 daily, T:0 a, m. v . ' No. 44, dally, : Bv m. ' ; " r Na Kit dllyr:H p. m, . ' - Trains arrive la Charlotte as -follows from the (: . No. us, 1D 44 a. m." .' ' No 4, li oi noon. i . .' No. t. I:IS p. m. Arrive from the west:' v' .' No, 44. 10:15 a. TO. - - No, lit. S-M urn.. Travelinf FssaSncer Aant n. a, uukv, u, r. a., . , Balelfh, N. C. . .. Lone leaf ledger :ahtSa f r ITitnra biu ' rs kept In stock at The Trib ' e. tf a kvM... 4 i ww a.U POPHAM'S ASTHMA REMEDY lives instant relief sad ao abaolato core io all cases of Auhma. Broacbitis, sad Hay Fever. Sold by drasgiMf Buil oa receipt of price Si oa ' - t Trlnl PnoKere by tn!l'1(l cental"' wrui, i i. to.. . wtM4,oiit: I am bow in the l'-- . over the Cabarrns Esvi HO.. "Jing, D S L. . Pru.-tloe limit' anl 'I i,rot hi. a . No. to over ui" Oiitvo hours; i to 11 a. r-r. Nose UK, u, aud 14 1 r-. - ... - !'- -V. 1 ,