Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / April 8, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
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K c::;:::3 im .Ma t .N M iviiciinm 4T. On Tr f Month MI Oa MaMUt . will amvalli On Month j"io Six Month ---- S 0 Twetv " .City H "ConrCx. C- A',ril 8- 191i- Speaker Champ t'lark maile an im portant speech refill ly that has no: a yet been printeil in any newspaper. It was made i" i-amus, at which n newspaper men wvre present. It was a private, heart tn lu-a-it talk between Clark and his deiuera:i' party fel lows. Here is wliat Mr. ( lark said, not for the public, but for the ear- of the Democratic ineinbers of Con gress: "I eongraiulate Mr. Palmer au.l his associates upon their retrenchment program. I congratulate them with all my heart and str?na:li. There is only one wav to ei .inon ze .and that is for each man of us to besiin econ omising at hone. To art the ball rolling I pionoe - io a little econ omizing on m own 1 1 k. I am su ing to cut down my oil!ce staff. Then 1 sha 1 sro f'iniu'i-. I am going to savo tho tt-op'e .rii.flt'll bv doing away with the Speaker's automobile. If I cannot legally get rid of it. I will run it into the Potomac. The Republicans will say it is cheeseparing and pea nut politics, but the people have some sense, and they will know that if we begin by giving up our own little grafts, that we will then be morally fortified to go afier the bigger ones. And I don't care what the Republi cans say, I will co-operate with any sman in this House who can find a place for sensible ecnoomy. I don't care whether it is a little economy or" a big economy that is proposed, I will work with any member to bring it about if it is a sensible one." OOITES HEAJLT. - Ysry PUIa la sfesM topis, j A fioat daay people fa M safferiag from - nxtriag vlfrnW for Wof lime Wfor toe tu art their owa coaseot to five op the indulgence from whrra their trouble anees. A gVDtlemaa ia Brooklyn describe his experience, a follow: "I became satisfied soso month ago that I owed the palpitation of the heart from which 1 suffered almost daily, to the use of coffee, (I had been a coffee drinker for 30 years) but found it very hard to give up the bev erage. "One day I ran arnwu a very seiuu ble and straightforward presentation of the claims of Postum, and was so impress thereby that I concluded to (rive it a trial. "My experience wiih it was unsat isfactory until 1 learned how it ought to lie prepared by thorough boiling for not less than l't or 20 minutes. After I learned that lesson there wan no trouble. "Poatum proved to be a most palat table and satisfactory hot beverafje. and 1 have used it every since. "The effect on my health has lvn mnt salutary. The heart palpitation from which I used la suffer so much, particularly af:er breakfast, has dis appeared and 1 never hae relurn of it except when I dine or lunch away j from home and drink the old kind of i coffee because Postum is not served. ' I rind that Postum cheers ami invig-J orates while it produces no harmful ; stimulation." N'ame given by Postum! Co, Bntile I reek. Mich. Ten days' trial proves an ep open er to many. Read the little book. '-The Road t Wellville," in pkir. "There's a Rea A press dispatch says that a Spar tanburg negro dropped dead when he drew four aces in a poker game. The Charlotte Observer takes the Hoor and sa.s: "We don't believe it. In the tirst place it is against the law to play poker in Spartan burg. In the second place negroes do not play poker they play 'skin.' In the third place it is impossible to draw four aces in a poker game." The selection of Senator Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia, as permanent caucus chairman and minority leader of the Senate during tl'.e present Congress was a direct slap at the Hob. William Jennings Bryan. Mr. Bryan not only advised against this coarse in his paper, the Commoner, but spent several days ia Washington , doing all he could to prevent it. Both Senators Simmons and Overman vo- ted for Marhu. The contest seemed to hare developed into a Bryan and anti-i'.ryan issue. Every Democratic Senator opposed to Mr. Bryan lined r up for Mr. Martin. A Reliable Medicine Not Narcotic Mrs. F. Marti, St. Joe, Mich., sayn: "Our liftle boy contracted a severe bronchial trouble and as the doctor's medicine did not fire 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 short time. Foley's Honey and Tar Compound has many times saved as much trouble and we are never with out it in the house." M. L. Marsh, Druggist. The fifty-first annual Xorth Caro lina State' Fair will be held at Ral eigh October 16-17-18-19 and 20, 1911. Thousands of Meteorites Fall Every Hoar. Strand Magazine. v Meteors, or shooting stars, as they - -5 are more generally called, have from our protecting envelope of air, very , the beginning of things been bombard ing the world at a rat estimated by , the highest authority at many thous V i aoids an hour, of which however, an average of only five or six are visible . to the naked eye daring the same per .. iod of lime. Fortunately, owing to few of these missiles reach us. In size I meteors vary from a few ounces to .many pounds in weight, and it is only, v. very occasionally that one is of suf , fleient dimensions to survive tbe pas- - saga of eighty to one hundred miles through an atmosphere increasing in ? density as the earth is approached. Tho speed at which they enter the at- Biosphere, calculated at not less than t thirty-flve miles a -eeond, generates such intense heat by friction that tbe -, iron of which the meteor principally ' 5 consists is immediately reduced to an i incandescent vapor, which is the lumi-;-. nona train to frequently seen in the heavens on a clear night. ' The vapor v rapidly cools, and condenses in form :J of these minute particles, .which as - some the spherical form as does shot ; during its fall from tho top of the i tower. - Finally, tho little spheres are scattered by the winds and currents in tho upper regions, and gradually des- scend in their millions as an invisible i" but neveivending sbower. . . SMITE'S FOBD. - , ' :' Mr. Custer Turner i met with . a very painful accident a few days ago , while be and his brother Pant were putting op posts for s fenee. Coster r was holding tho post while Paul wss : driving it with a maoL The maul handle broke, the maul striking Cus ter on tho noso inflicting s painful wonnd, though not serious. Mr. Joseph Harteell, of Big lick, vh'ted bis sister, Mrs, J, 8. Turner, ' last week. v, ' Tlie riches' this neighborhood are a'l kUled. . . ,. , mors some men owe, the more t!.ey want to ows. -: ,r.-; Better than Spanking. Spanking does not cure children of bed wetting. There is a constitutional cause for ths trouble. Mrs. M. Sum mers, Box W, Notre Dame, Ind., will send free to any mother her success ful home treatment, with full instruc tions. Send no money, but write her today if your children trouble you in this way. Don't blame the child, the chaices are that it can't help it. This treatment also cures adults and aged people troubled with urine difficulties by day or night. The Atlanta Journal wants to know "Where, is the old-fashioned house wife who made quince preserves?" She is attending a bridge-whist party. Durham Sun. SUFFERED 23 YEARS Constant Suffer tr From Chron lo Catarrh ReUtvedby Forma. Mrs. J. H. Bourland. San Babe, Texas, writes: "For twenty-three years I was a coo stant sufferer from chronic catarrh. I had a severe mis ery and bum inc in the top of my head. There was al most a ' con tinual drop Oinf or mucus m to my throat, which caused frequent e peeto ration. My entire ays tern gradually became in volved, and my condition Mr( H Burtall4 crew worse. I had an tncenant cough and frequent attacks of bilious colic, from which it seemed I could not recover. My bowels also became (Tec ted. causing alarming attacks of hemorrhages. I tried many remedies, which gave only temporary relief or no relief at ail. I at last tried Parana, and in three days 1 was re lieved of the I owel derangement After using Ave bottles I was entirely cured. I moat cheerfully recommend the use of rerun to any on similarly afflicted." v. . j A -oVj r The Regal Shoe Co. Announces aNev Policy That Will Shake Up the SIico Trade ; . RegcilPrices AreiN $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 It Means Greater Variety and Greater Value in Regal Shoes l Than Ever. . o Regal Agtntt and Regal Ciutomerm Everywhere: 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 wiH be fixed exactly as it thus figures, regardless , of whether it comes out in odd or even money. Thus, if the cost of any model, plus Sf, ia $3.85, the price of that model will bt $3.85 not $4.00, or any other figure. And t kit Pritt will U etrititd ui certified by thartend public mcamniantt mnd stamped 0m tke $k t tk factory. - , This smsshes the immemorial thoe-trade policy of building all high-grade shoes to fit certain arbitrary prices, i The trade will, undoubtedly, rise in protest against our action, .and call us "price-cutters." But like Regal innovations in the past, k will benefit Regal customers. ' la face of that fact we can disregard this protest as we have others. . This it NOT a price cut, although the result will be to give Regal Shoe buyers better value for price than ever before. Regal Shoes have mfwayt been priced at 5 above cost of manufacture and selling. Bat, according to universal custom, the prices were fixed BEFOREHAND, at $30, $4.00, $4.50, ctc-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 will. 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 tbe shoe and the other on a fixed, arbitrary price at which it must be sold. YVc shall now keep both eyes ON THE SHOE, to tnc Improvement bout ot style and ot value. ! Very truly yours, J ilrnnfiMg Dirtctor 7 r Kig ml Situ Crmpvr 1 Do You RMizeiVliat Tliis This meant an end of the arbitrary prices on shoes. These arbitrary price have for yean been fixed on good shoes immovably at $3.50, $4.00, $4.50, $5.00, $5.50, and io on; each price always a half dollar jump away f rom the next. If a designer produced a new shoe which could properly be sold at,1 say, $4.30, the manufacturer had : either to take something out of it to bring the price to $4.00 dr' 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 had to. buy and pay for more 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 to pay a certain Met. ' Why should he be forced to pay in half-dollars if satisfaction could be given in dimes? Why must he pay $5.00 if all that he wanted could be had at r$l.85?; .; JiJ Herealtet, as Mr. Bliss' letter states, every Regal - price will be made io fit the shoe, not the shoe to fit the price. If the Regal Shoe-builders produce a style' - that can be sold for $3.85, then $3.85 will be the price. -Nothing will be added merely to bring its price to . $4.00, nor will anything be taken out . to make its price $3 JO. . ;The customer gains both ways and the Regal style-makers now have a free band, unfettered . by tradition. - . ; . ' : v With this new freedom, and with the whole atten tion of the Kegal organization hxed on stanaaras of ouality, regardless of the ups and downs of the leather market,. Regal Shoes will more than ever be the best that money can buy. , j , " i 1 1 In Regal Shoes You Get What Ycu WimtimdPayiMyfcr Tht YcaG ll , CANNON fi mi2mi: This la The Stamp Exclusive Distributers cf T03 r.:ni SLICES :'i - 1 , . 4 if,injf 3frtKSAJt ' Everything ' - FOR THS Garden! PEAS, . BEAHS, COEIC, RADISH, . BEST, CABBAOE, , LETUCE. PAESlTIpa, SALS ATT, CTJCUUBEB, PAESLET, OKRA For Sale The residence of the late . B. Calds-sU. Jno, K. PatUma Co. , Importance ot Ilih v Grade -Sanitary ' - Pll ., Good Plambing is ons of the nost inportant t satores about e house. Toe eanaot have to assy eafe-gnards fas ths health of your t ,n;:y and 700 r salt. Tborsfore tits s. M sost l the tZZ7 Ilomtirj will ia retlity be health assnranee as wtU as a sarir ia repair hiUs. . . I have purchased ontright a dry prsparstion for cleaning ladies gar ments that I guarantse to give satis faction, or I will make no ebsrge for ths work. .J am sols owner of this preparation snj on account of the ex cellent satisfaction it has f 'ven I maks this proposition to tha 1. , ies of Con cord and vicinity:' tend as sny ar ticles or garments you want e'tsned and after we oe this dry c'laninj preparation e ntbem,- if tliy are not entirely sath r.d w..h tbe work I will make no sl-args. o. e. r:rnr.i'r-.- I it !! Pm.w . Charlotte. K. O. January S. 1IM'."1 Chung, of ehdule PICA BOARD AIR LINJ& affaetlT noon 'Sunday, January IS. Wa.tbound trains laav Charlotte as follows, dally: No. 41. daily, f.ii p. m " 1 - Eaitbound. dally:. v,: , -. No. 40. dally, i:M a. m. . . ; N. 4 dily, 1:10 a. m. No. 44, dally. :0 p. m. , , , Na 131. dally. I 6& p. m. 1 ' Train arrive In C'barlotte as follow from th at: . , x .,: No. in, IMS a. m. ' No 4r, soon. " - No. ii. : p. m. ' -.. ' Arrive from th wt - No. 4. IB IS a. m. " , No. Ui, S i t p. m. ' ' Tramline Paensr AfenL H. . LEAHU. U P. . , ... , . . linMiieh. N. C Loose If f 1 ' -r t' r-f 's for ir,nre's I: V i l ,i ia stmk at Tbe Trib l i ( a. ti rOPHAM'S ASTHMA PEKEDY ire i an ant relief and an abauhit core in all cases of Aatbma, Broacuiii. and Hay Fever. Sold by dmggiat ; mad oa receipt at price Si.oo. Trial Hrinn by mall IS eenta, " WHJiA.s i . a. ia., ujmt. Okti piidtyrsvisr.'--'( t- -y. . I am now in tlis I'.-iji luJingi over ths Cabarraa Eavi. I HO.1 3. in. j. s. LArrrTY PrnMIre llmll-'l tn ,r. Nee anl Throat and l'' ? i Oii'i In th Inmna I Voon No. t ov.r !abarrn'ivi..., . -t.. ee hour: I to 11 a. in, aud t to 4 .-- . . 5
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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April 8, 1911, edition 1
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