i. B. IHHIIU. MM M4 Laal 1 dWU To. o. M Owe Toar ...... ia Month - , .. . --- - . Thro MontBS u i i - - On Mont rtiumui AffMAnrrcMwrr. Advertising iim caa bo hod t tb mm. Coay for chuiM um oo la t 1 o'clock - ". Cards of Tboaka, eolutlos of Ko port and similar artk-los are chart at lh rat of 1 coal pox tla ah ia Kntorod a aeoiid c) mall matter April It, lld. In. poatoflW at Coo ord. N. C under tho aot of March . in. - Oat of tho oity aad T atall tho fottorw. ha pilin oa loo RvootBs THoaa will amUi On Month .W I Moath Twlv Month GULDST02IX Find weather aiaee last week. Qroand i bout ready for faroere to go to plowing. ' ... oat of oar prop la wnt to thd ptea m the rirf Monday and re port od a airo time. y. Pedehee are few and -far betveea aad many apple treee are dot Moon ing thin year dd they rar fruit last year and will rat Uiu Tear. W beat at looking well, th rainy treat ner had rot it oa tat higher move Mr. Bnrwell Frick tod Mis Eller Cnlp word married oa Udt Sunday. Boota has Ven plenty daring tb faster season. Mr. J. C. Burrage and wife, of Coa- iMd-d, visited thd former ' parent Dert over easier. Mr. Will Bun-age, of Rocky Mount, eamd ia oa a visit last week and re- tnrned Tuesday. Rev. Matney, Presiding Elder, mov ed id to hid new boast Monday. Wd need some of those chickens that lay three eggs a day. Our do not average one eg in three day daring the year. Egg art bound to decline at the rata of three eggs per day for ben. Sometimes and very often tbree bens lay in the same nest. I don't tee bow a man can tell any thing of certainty about how many egg one hen lays especially if he has more than one ben. If he has but one hen and no other hiWana mAa t(.n The Greensboro Sews, one of the(ha coul1 , jiule more KtvlnU in very best daily newspapers, in thesis statement. We would not have South, scores in publishing today been murh surprised if this would tho detniled fimires f tlie nonunion n8V6 ocenred on the first day of April, , ,, x- ,. r. , . Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Miller, of Con- of all North Carolina counties. The ' , . . , ' " . " 1 . cord, have been here among friends (uioiuiu w rr.. in., I...., ...iafic 8na nave returned. M and township in the State is given. The figures show a decided increase in population all over the State. The total increase is 302,477. Probably the most gratifying fact about the returns is that while they show that North Carolina is JOHN M. aOLESBY V Kdlto Coneord7X- C., April 21, 1911. TIME. ' Pdrt with time u with money, paring; pay no moment but in purchase of it worth. And what it worth Ask deathbed; they eta tefl. Young. MT. PLEASANT. R. T. D. 1. There was a large congregation at tended preaching at Mission Easier Sunday. Rev. J. S. Harris preached an excellent sermon. There were a number of voting peo- forging.ple from here attended the soriahle Mr. YV. A. Oayton's ijrht. Music was fur- hand. Rev. J. S. Harris was a pleu..ant visitor at the home of M. R. t rav- iSome one sends us a copy of the ton's last Fridav and Satnrdav. Daily Herald, published at Everett,' Tl,e wedding bells have not rang Washington, which contains an acl-vft bnt are exacting io hear them . . . . . , . at any time near Mt. Pleasant, on count of the raising of a popular sub-1 rou(e teription of $45,000 in that city of! There will be preaching at Mission money needed by the public treasury, ! Baptist rhuroh ihe third Sunday ev- du to tho dflcreis in mihlic. revnue i enln? al '"' nd Sunday dt 11 fast ahead as a manufacturing and Pdrty given al c... ; :. i i;t I 't Saturday . . , i nished bv the l age stnn an agricunurai svaie. by voting out 'the saloons last Novem ber. This is the first case of 'the kind on record, so far as we have beard, and shows that the people of Everett hav not only public spirit but that they- are behind he enforcement of the prohibition law. clock. BUTE EYES. Mr. Edmonds may have been jus tified in knocking ihe ten miles of bad road be fonnd in Cabarrus coun ty, but ai the same time he might have said something about the excel lent road between Concord and Salis bury. Durham Herald. It is conceded that the seven miles of road from Concord to Kannapolis, every yard of which is in Cabarrus county, ia as fine a piece of road as can be found on the entire, National Highway. The "recall has been used by Jie citixens of Tacoma, Washington, against their mayor, A. Y. Fawcett, who, bad served only eleven months. He vat charged with grose incompe tence, and was opposed by the women sad the church people generally. The recall election resulted ia his being ousted. One dealer in Charlotte hat sold about a dozen harem skirts. We have not yet teen anything in the Charlotte papers about a riot on th street of (bat city, however. ; (The Baltimore Evening Sun refer to Congressman Gudger, of ihe tenth North Carolina district,, ad "Repre sentative Godgeon.f Sach ia fam . One Conductor Helped Back to Work. Mr. Vr'ilford Adams is his name, and he writes: "I was confined torn v bed with chronic rheumatism and nsed two bottles of Foley's Kidney Remedy with good effect. The third bottle put me on my feet and I resumed wort as conductor on the Lexington, Ky, Street Railway. It wilt do all you claim in case of rheumatism." It clears the blood of uric aicd. M. L. Marsh Drugist. . North Carolina Lothdru Synod. Tba one hundred and eighth annual convention of the Evangelical Luth eran Synod and Ministariom f North Carolina will be held in St. Paul 'd ebareh, Wilmington beginning WeoV nesday, May lOttlu i.r;,' 'i--:: .Speaker and aubjeeU as followd: Wednesday, 10 a. Synodiea! ser mon, President Rev. V. Y. Booser: 8! wily a "human being, not an antel. NO. 3 TOWNSHIP. Miss Carrie Emerson, president of the Young People's Missionary band, entertained the members at an egg hunt Monday afternoon. Miss Carrie Harris has gone to Moravian Falls to visit friends. Mr. Allen Harris and Misses Virgie and Bessie Harris epent Easter Mon day in Mooresville with friends. Mrt George Readling, a delegate from Gilwood church, is attending the Presbytery at Concord. Messrs. J. F. Bradford dnd J. B. Smith spent Tuesday in Concord, where they purchased a. bass violin for Hickory Camp Band, W. 0. W, No. 152. The Great -Keystone Shows passed through our section Sunday en route from their winter quarters to Vir ginia. Safe Itddidna For Children. -Foley 'a Honey and Tar Compound is a aafe and effective medicine for children as it does not eontdin opiates or harmful drug. The genuine Fol ey 'a Honey and Tar Compound id in a yellow package. M. L. Marsh, Drug. Ifcurried Tolk Would be Happier. If they tried to be as agreable a in courtship dy. .;:.; t i- . -. If they kissed and made np at once after every quarrel.: : ";:; t"-, Q ? If each wonld try to be a real tub- port and eorafort to ihe other. If household expenses were alwayi proportioned to receipts. ; If women were as kind to their hua. btndt ad they were to their lovers. If etea remembered the other ws P m Beneflcbry iMuation-ThJ Servie of tbo Churcb CoDege; l. Tha Clrareh College and the Business Man Bev. Jt M. Kinard, Pk. D.J a. The Chnrch College and Ihe Profes sional Man Rev. J. p. HiUef. Thort. day afternoon Laymen ' - meeting wth addressed by laymen; 8 p. m, ssiont Our - Mission Field ; at ; me, Rev. JV L Morgan; 2. Our ion Field Abroad, Rev, B. C. - .'Un-.t, D. D, . ,..- i aii 'ay, 11 a. an Ordination' ser- t, Lev. R. L. Patterson ; 3 0 p. to the fiunday school Rev. 1 xlL r ;- D- D. ; 8 p. a, aermon A. i. Voigt, D. D. , ;' ,,, , f '. union, in eomiilg out in - " a j imary, show that he is 1 f thd verdi(H of ths f , li :.. r". .,, J iii the L.a i Jiiurri L I "If men were at thoughtful for their wives ad they were for them when sweethearta. .?V .-v ' If both partie remembered thdt they were married for worse aa well a better. ' . . , . Rcnscmbcr The Old Comfort before coffee did its work? postu;.! SOiiM SGIIQOL Lesson IV. Second Quarter, For Apr! 23, 1911." THE INTERNATIONAL" SERlfel Text ef the loo. It Ktoaa all, 4-In. Momory Vorao. 11 -Ooldaai Tart. I Ckra. aatiav CowihwwUi rVd- ardo bv Raw. O. MT. 41""' Is a rebnflder Tod'. we combine the story ef Joasa, Hoc f Judab. la last woek Icaaoa aad la tnla one. He begaa to rebra di bla ttventh year and rolened forty rears, doinf risbt In tba dlicbt ef Ute Lord, while Jtbotada, the priest. In ttructed blm (rene 1-3), but he did net destroy Idolatry la the laud. Our but rood king in' Judab wd Je aoahdphdt, who va ucreeded by hi eon Jeboram, bis flrstborn, who mar ried a daughter of . Ahab and did avU In tb sight of the Lord sod put to death bis six brothers. lie reigned tnly dlgbt j ear aud died a fearful death, dd the prophet Klijab aeot hint word that he would. It I written of him thdt he departed without belug desired (II Chron. Hi). Jehoubsx (or Ahaxiahi, his youngest on, succeeded blm, all his older broth trd hiving been slalu by the Syrians. Be reigned only one year, aud his mother, Athnllnh, was his counselor to do wickedly (II Chron. nil, 1-4). He waa slain by Jehu, and when his mother knew that he waa dead she t once proceeded to destroy all the d royal of the houae of Judab, but Jehosheba (or Jeuosbaoeatb), thd wife tf Jehoiada, the priest, and aister of Ihaxlah, rescued the Infant Joaab and bid him and bis nurse iu the bouse of thd Lord alz years while Atballdh reigned over the land (II Kings xt, 1-3; Q Chron. nil, 10-12). Last week's lesson told us how, In his seventh year, Jehoiada, the priest, arranged to have blm brought forth, inotnted, crowned and proclaimed king, and made a covenant between the Lord and the king dnd the people thdt they ibould be the Lord's people (xL 12, IT), fhey broke down the house of Baal and his altars and Images, clew the priest of Baal, and also the wicked (seen mother Atballah. So the people rejoiced and the city was quiet (xl, 18-20). We must not confuse our good King foaah of Judab with another Joash, king of Israel, who began to reign rver the ten tribes in the thlrty-sev- nth year of the king of Judah's reign and who departed not from the sins of fdroboam, the son of Nabat, who made Uriel to sin (II Kings xii). 10-13). Wa lave a key to the heart of today's led-, wa In the expression, ."The house of Ihe Lord,'' wuh'h occurs u our lesson sea Just twelve times. If we in- trade verse lrt. Inasmuch s the king spent the first dx years of liU life in suine part of the botiBe of the Lord under the care f the priest of the Ijord ' It Is tbe most suggestive phrase lu our lesson, Ind the wore so when we remember that the kin its who reigned nt Jeru salem were ald to stl on the throne f tbe Lord ns klnj; (I Chron. xxlx. 23). We cannot think of Israel as a nut Ion Without tnliemnrle or temple as a Iweltlng place for Jehovah lu tbelr Bidet. One of the' first commands to Hosed after the deliverance from Egypt end the giving of the. Is w at Blaat was, "Let them make me a anctudry that 1 may dwell among them" (Ex. xxv, 8). When Cyrus, king af Persia, made a proclamation througb mt ail bis kingdom that .the Jews might return from Babylon be said thdt It wad to build the house of tbe Lord God of Israel In Jerusalem (Ezra I 1-4). Exeklel xl to xlvUI tell of tbe temple thdt Id to be when they ball be gathered from all nation nev er to be pulled np or tedtterdd dny awre. . r-a.-vi : When Israel wa numbered It waa the law that every one, rich and poor, ibould give d half ahekel a atonement noney dt a ransom for bit aouL and thla money was to be used In the service of tbe Lord (Ex. Xxx, 11-18). raid It probably a part of thd money referred to In verso 4 with which they were to repair the house of the Lord, for the doad of Athallih, thdt wicked woman; bad broken up the house of God and had bestowed the dedicated things nnon Baa lam. - . Joash Instructed the priest and the Levltea to go out unto the ettlea of fuddh and gather of all Israel money to repair the house of tha Lord from rear to year, but this collecting busl- d did not work any better than It toot todey, and after more then twen ty year tb work wad not don (verses 14; II Chron. xxlv, 4-7). ? 4 7 Then Jehoiada, the priest, took a thett, with a bole m the ltd, aad net B beside the altar on tbe right aide aa no eemeth Into the novae of the Lord, and they made a proclamation through Indah and Jerusalem to bring In the String that Mom had commanded, and tbua they gathered money In abundance, and the workmen wrought; dnd the' work waa perfected by then dnd they et the boua of God In bid . itdtd and strengthened It (verse 9-14; U Chron. sxlv, 8-13). I hnvd personally tried the box at tho door plan for thank offerings, for benefits received at the eervlcea, the money to be given to m Intone to help UU the glad tiding to other, and It haa worked splendidly.; It le many a long year since I ever solicited money from nny one personally or permitted any one to go out collecting, and we Bud there la no need of It Tbe wick 1ned of Joaih, after th death of loholsda dt tb egd of 130 year, dnd t'a murder of thd don of Jehoiada and ft l.!try are written la II Chron, U-2I. . ... PEAS, BEANS. CORK, RADISH, BEET, CABBAGE, LETUOE, PARSNIPS, SALSAF7, OUOUKBER, . f v - PARSLEY, OKRA DNI0K8ET8. - QIBS021 3DEU0 WIST CABAXB.OS. There was .dlightfol Easier par ty r"n dt the Borne of dir. and Ura. E. VT, (Viaterrhury last Friday eight, hick waa enjoyed by lanre crowd ia spit of th rain. At 10 JO o'clock everybody waa invited to tbe dining room aad there wad a delightful top per. There were about 45 present. Among them went: Miasee Mat tie Brown, ' Ollie ' and Wilh Crenshaw, Willie May Oehler, Bertha and hfarv Beard, Mario Grace Barnett, daa . Harkey, Grace Wal lace, Claudia and Matririd Ueriar. Meam. Brevard aad Clifford Walla re. At laa dnd Toowr Dd via, Henry Oallo way. rbariio Whiilev, Bovce, Ottie end Edloa Gray. Jame Kirk, Jame Oehler. Charlie Markev, Stitt Beard, Ed. Taylor. Ctariie lifter, Cldvtoa Aleander, Fred and George Motley, Tom Brumley, Jr., Homer Heglar, John Alexander, Jack Barnett, Er nest Walker. Remember he eehool enterlain- nient at the Oehler school houv on April th. 1911, betdnnine at 2 o'clock, K m, i Mr. E. W. Cnnstenhury has had t lisrhto put in hid bonne. SWEETHEART. A Reliable Medicine Not Narcotic Mrs. F. Marti, St Joe, Mich, aaym: 'Our liVtlo boy contracted a aevere bronchial trouble and ad tho doctor 'a medicine did-not enre him, I gave him Foley's Honey and Tar Compound in which I tavo great faith, it cured tbe cough aa well aa (ho cooking and gagging apelb, and no got weH in a short time. Foley 'a Honey and Tar Compound ha many timea saved na much trouble and we are never with out it in the bouse." M. L. Marsh, Dmrgist. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAT Take Laxative Broino Quinine Tab lets. Druggists refund money if it fails to enre. E. W. Grove's tignature on every box. Everything FOB THE Garden Desirable Offices Morris Building' Best location in eity. Steam heat, light and janitor service free. - Also aleepine rooms, bath. light and janitor service free. - . Ptione No.' SO 1 THE GLORIOUS MOUOTRINS OdiCOZdUTA ''THE LAND OF THS gKY" "THE SAPPHIRE COUNTRY" ' Winter, Spring, Summer and Adtnmn ard thd proper seasons for tourists to visit Asbeville dnd "THE LAND OF THE SKY.", In Dtner word, this bedntiful eonntrv ortddnU deUchtfnl attraction the year round, with bene- nid ana pieasnren peealiar to each ddason of thd day of tba year. 1 Eeached . By---itS1 Bouthcra Zlailway Solid Through Trains, including Pari lor Car-between Ooldsboro and Asbe ville via Edlcigh, Greensboro, Salis bury. .Ojherl Convenient Throogh Car Arrangesaentd. WINTER TOURIST TICKETS NOW Lat Tonr Idead and WUei be Known. J. H. WOOD, T. P. AiWville, K. C. tt. IL DeBUT FS, T. P. A, Charlotte. a, rAUxNiuLL, T. P. A Roloigh. DR. J. S. LAFFEklTY r lr(tlo llmltfid ttt c . , and Throat and rittlng Olaawa.' Omet In thd Morrt bIMlnv. Room Na 3 evor Cabarrua Sarin Hank, OfTIco honroi I (a 11 . . - . a. , - r--T, - now i:x dfcj dddv j wa . tdjele WOO i' 1 ' ' rs e . t - v-0 'An EdrthqzaJiQ for ths Trada; o but a Benefit to th? Pcllls J i Prices eAr $505 NOBODY OUTSIDE the shoe trade carl realtoe what a Jolt that trade rW -; ; ccived when the Regal Shoe Company annoxinced its new pridngjpolicy. "HENCEFORTH," said the Regal Shoe Co, "all the shoes we make will ': be priced at COST OF MANUFACTURE AND SELUNQ. PLUS ' FIVE PER CENT. COMMISSION no matter whether that price figures out in odd or even money1, and without regard to the 50c jumps . between prices, heretofore arbitrarily feed ta the shoe business.'' , . ; : T WAS NOT the five pef cent that gave the jolt -The Regal Shoe Co. :l has always done business on a five per cent profit and every manu-- facturer knew it It was the abandonment of the "even price" that - caused the stirx : . j1;::-- THAT " EVEN-PRICE r-alk lMS oeen' the superstition of the shoe trade for twenty yearecr -more; Standard shoes had been soldi . lor so long at $3.50, $4.00, $4.50, $5.00 and so on. that dealers thought v no other prices were possible. ' 'vjiM'ii . ' "BARGAIN " SHOES nameless products shoveled out by shoe ''depart- ' ments" might be sold at odd prices, i But tan dard makesoh, never! : i ' IT WAS ARGUED seriously by expert shoe-salesmen that men and women who wanted shoesof name and character would roAer pay even prices. -That is, they argued that a mart would rather pay $5.00 than $45, whether or not he got anyming worth having for that extra 15c ' t 1 AND SO, WHEN a designer! prodj a iiew" shbr i profit and all at $4.85, the manufacturers were up against an embar '"' ? . , rassing situatkfcnV'w: THEY COULD DO any one of three things and some one of these three : things they alldid: . ..a :'-.,;c srtQ THEY COULD LET that $4.85 shoe stand as it waa and ask $5.00 for it . totting an extra 15c profit, if Regal competition, would allow it, or THEY COULD ADD 15c worth of unrtetidsai expense to the shoe, -- brmgingitsprice up tO $Sj00; .p OR, THEY COULD SKIN 35c worth OUT of the sho hrfmrtn if mW '1 . Wo S&J&J?M. frW&.&N' the shoe's quaUty. , "balance. " Yv -T:f RTTT AS T?nw TV-tTMrt. eW kW.. ousL'" r lifL" 11 shoe for $45 why that was nor to be thought -rjftr-: m:M, SEEMS RIDICULOUS, doesn't It? :But"feJl BurWstitions seem i ridiculous V. after you have explpdedthem. And the Regal has exploded this one. -b: -. HEREAFTER, Regal Shoes will be buihy just as the Regal style-builden ' rJanthem.T IF THEY SAY '.This shoe is right as it startdsthe -best shoe that devised and built for its particutar want and purpose"why that shoe' -? is going to the public just as it is, unaltered by a foolish custom.' . THE DESIGNERS will nof be tequiredto add anything urmecessary to it nor to take arrthifig ctilo ----- set figure.- . " ' . THE MANUFACTURING COST of that shoe wfll be figured carefully; . f r five per cent witt be added and a rurther allowance covering the actual cost of sellftlg tiiat shoe to ma customer, and the resulting sum will be - 1 the prir of that rarticuto or whatever it is, ; i-v' THE PRICE WILL BE STVUIPED ON TO , FACTORY and certified publitf accountants will verify the prices and -: ' '. ' also verify the tact that only five per cent commission is added.; - ri. YOU GAIN MORE than the dimes you save by the odd prices. . You gain , - also by better balanced qualify and by the fact that you pay only for -what you vnafcrvfiS .t REGAL Style-Buiiders now have a free hand. They simply get out the 1 - v BEST SHOE THAT THEY CAN DEVISE for a certain purpose at $ h ; , about a certain price. " You pay for exactly what you get, plus the fairs " 5 percent - You are taxed rotting for iseless adt;-;''' At The Lowest Pricar TEit C&a Cuy It CANNON cs FETZERCO. SdBBdnsandstitasi -j 0!yrfc:..:C-l: . I tsve pnrchased outright a dry preparation for cleaning ladiee' gar nenta that I gnaranteo to give eatia f action, or I will make no ahargo for the worltj' I am eole owner of this prpparation and on aeeonnt of tho et f I lent tatisfaetion it had riven 1 vakd tin projiosition to' the I , ie of Con ford and vieitiity: tend u dny ar ticled or garment yon want cleaned and afr we oe ti.'n d-y -cleaning prepartttiuii o r. .', .pn, if l. fy are not entirely . 1 v uh'th urk I will aiakd no t... . ' . . ... - -ft'- '" '7';.: KrVf ' " '1TW -,rr. V aa.MvB. villia:' r::2r,zY tills H. 70U evrwrKet your imrvons t torn and canoml trouMa wilh your kid Boye and bladtlerT Mava you polad la loin,, aide, back and bladdnrt Have jrott a Aahby antwaranro f tha faoo, dnd an Vr Iho y?T A frient i1.lra to paae erirwT It an. 'IHi,. ,' KMiwy PLia wilt euro yon -IfnirgiMt, i'rlce fcuo. WUXI 1 " "1. CO.. ftoofc. CloT.l..d.Oa t.i.l ty L,. Drug Cosr-"- 7. . tm .J m. . m A ' -1 am now la tha Horria I .HJbg, ovdr thd Cabarrua Bavin jt t V ; . 7 : n. a rr- -7:, Loom leaf ledger dbeeid tur i .' . UnJ lit in slock at 1U X..h- r:

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