Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / May 30, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
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Ml CI..!-. .3 L.ILT Tu. a. a. inmiuk i KMCUnWI AT. Cm Tr l i Mentha TMI MoaUa . Ba MwU MS U at Adrartnl r( cm a k at t (Am, Copy (or at LM rut P" April . 1IX p'm ,J2Y iVLt w n ute Um art at eUre . i.ia. . My aa4 T . mm i mil aa ta trill arvraMi . ia Mwti t Moatha wdra Month Zkn M. WMM Caty avslf. 1. I . MS l.tt A BOUTSESJT MOTSXX . , j Ia tb eoar af a brief articl eaJt d fart a e yte raerat daala of au wa saotaar, EtUlor turanca roa, ax a Profraaaaa Faff, para Iba fot lowiag daaarrad tribal ta a rapidly raaiahiag trpa, t$ wosna of Iba Old SoaU: I SosMtisMS woxrr if tka world ha yr kaowa ait-bar typa of woeaao bood. the tba Sorthera womsa of Ooncotd, K. C Mat SO, 1111. ENJOYING LIFE. Bar you round yoor Ufa dls taateful ? My life did and doea imack swet Wat your youlb of pleasur wasteful? Mine 1 oared and bold com plete. Do yoar Joya with age diminish? When mine fall me I'll com plain. Mutt In death yonr daylight fin ish? My sun seta to rise again. - Robert Browning. Mr. Grorer lliaanhaitar, wb has a raw from -Aabarill aa la Soother railroad, epcal a few day with kit parrots, Mr. and Mr. J do. Jaa, E. Mjaaobatatar, eX Ma ft. Mr. Otoar r tarnad ta kit work last Moeday. Mr. J bo. and J as. WaneU, of No. 5, hare retaraed frost Morgaatoa, wbara tba kad foo to4 sea 4bix brother Birt, who baa baaa ia tba hoe piial four year far treat ataaL Tbay my asoutra lima. Tbey grew up on were Informed that their brother was tba plantations af tba Old Sooth ia I not Improving any ia bit mind, wbat proved to ba tba saaaet glow of Mr. Bofaa Kriamiaarr it arrirtinr a patriarchal eiviUaatioa that baa ran- Mnsrs. Hark and Waiter with their tshed aa completely as to social unr J iDg Jennie ia Salisbury for May tbt of Homer ' time, but whose charm! 30th. and romance will lure aa to dreamt Commanioa Mrricee vara bald at of its beauty. They were just budding Mount Mitchell Methodist chareh last into womanhood whan (ba fateful war Sunday with twa dan and airbt aar- drums sounded in '61, and their young rices. souls were teated in the four years of The spring oats aad blackberry epie struggle and distress that follow- trope promise a sure failure, beeauae ea. Ana men, wun spirits maac per- it ia too drv. The retail druggist pays taxes to the Siate, the county, the city, pays rent and insurance, gives employment to clerks, contributes to the churches i he charitable and c'vie organizations, and is a fellow business man and feet through toffering, with a dignity which poverty had not altered and a eourage whici defeat had not ahaken, they took up life on the small farms of he South and became th inspira tion of the best that was wrought by the men in atered gray is the long or deal of our rebuilding. To that generation my mother be longed, and I think her spirit was sweeter for the times through which she had lived. Before her marriage in 1880 she was a school teacher; and not so much to any aid from schools as to the instruc tion and inspiration I received from her do I owe whatever material suc cess I have foeen able to win. Yet I feel, and know she feels, that this is the smaller part of the debt that I am due her. If I hope to keep, phrase, mv "trust in all things high' if I may hope that "through I trip and fall, I shall not blind my soul with clay," I must pay tribute to the influence of a mother and a father whose well-lived Faith enabled them to appraise life's values fairlv. Thcv fired me with ambition for achieve neighbor with all olio are workinc , . i ,. , ... ment and success, but thev taught firs to help the eommumtv. The medicine; , . - ., ... " . peddler pays no taxes, or insurance, employs no clerks, donates to no pub lic enterprises, takes business away from legitimate merchants, thereby seriously hurting the home market, and has no interest in the town. Is is fair for the peddler to have the privilege of doing business without taxation and compete with the local dealers who support the state, county and city and donate to public im provement T Every property holder who has yet been approached has agreed to pay his share of the expense of putting down the bitulithie or asphalt street on Union betwen Depot and Corbin streets. This ghows the progressive spirit of our people, and that they are willing to contribute anything that goes to make Concord bigger and better. The city is to pay half of the expense, and the property owners on each siile of the sireet one-fourth. Concord is going forward, and every body seems anxious to help the progress of the onward march. Th peaches, apple and plums hart three fourth dropped from the trees. Oats sown last fall and wheat prom ise a good harvest. Didn t that black spot on the sun turn over for the month of May. Poor Hal ley and ois wee comet. Wouldn't they have had rough sled ding had it appeared this 1911 in stead of 1910. But you who are going to see it on its next visit can tell your people that North America had been blessed with the greatest crops ever recorded in the year 1910. Mrs. Esther Barnhardt, of No. 5, gets the prize. She has had one hun dred and tweniy-six chicks hatched this vear and has lost four by natural death, and two by suicide, vis.: one hv rlrnwnin? and one bv hanrinff. Now have kept, if I may v rnnnliuiu who ant imttinir three in Tennyson's fine Lnn,r,j lu.u tkit farm whose turkey is voting for a Democrat president in 1912, had better go a lit tie slow for N'o. 5 is coming to the front. Mr. Manlius Barnhardt, of Char lotte, is visiting his parents, of No. 5, Mr. and Mrs. Jno A. Barnhardt. The one-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Moose, of No. 10, was bur ied at New Gilead last Friday, Rev. D. C. Cox, officiating. Miss Sallie Cox, of Davenport Col lege, arrived at the parsonage last week, where she will spend the sum mer with her parents, Rev. D. C. and Mrs. Cox. We are glad to have Miss Cox in our midst. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Moose, of No. 10 are visiting Mrs. Moose's mother, Mrs. L. Patterson, in No. 5. Miss Mvrtle Suther, of Concord, vis ited Mr. and Mrs. Brown Bostian, in No. 5 last week. Mrs. Zeb Blackwelder, of W. Vir ginia, is visiting her parents Mr. and ana mosi ot an mai me truest victory ;or defeat is within one'j own soul ana mat me eann Knows no more tragic failure than the man who has bought so-called Success at the cost of his only enduring treasures his man hood and his ideals. by Ylaei X fleaalss Oast tatwrtai fresa Vsvard, a Newark, O. "Aboat twa rears an say wife was ia very poor baaltk. for tkrea snoatbeea suffered Cross a bad eoark which kad settled as bar loan aba ae ran down, red sued ia aWek aad bad all the tysiptotns af eoaaasrp- uocu . Bha aena taxing V woi, and before tba ftrst beOie was foaa she was issptwrad ia health before ah bad Aniseed bar (bird battle, ber eeorh was tea) sad the waa waQ. "We cannot say too asncb in praise of Viaot. N. U BUMotea." (Wt jruaranUe this t liioaisl ta ba geay nine. - ' la yutaoaery trouble Yiaol shows its power for food. It goes to the seat of trouble. - keels tba inftsned rarfaree and oares the seas af th cough. Ia bandreda of cases where eod Urer oil and ssnnlsinas bar failed, Vtnol baa soeeaeded because it con tains all the eura tire value they do- bo Ms good work is not retarded by nee lees grease and oil. Try a bottle of Vinol with the un derstanding that yoor money will be returned if it doea not help yoo. Uibaoa Drug Store. Badvoai Bat to Kaairflle, Oa aeeonat of the Summer School of tka Soatk to be held at Kaoxrille, Tcbjl, Jon 20 to July 28, the South ern will sett round trip tickets on June 13, 19. 30. 24. 25, July 1 8, and IS, 1911, Anal limit fifteen days from, bat not including, date of sal with privilege ot extension of final limit until September 30th by depositing ticket with special agent, and payment of one dollar. The round trip rat from Concord ia fO.05. M A neat Fourth of July attraction for Chicago would be a footrace on the Lake front between Mayor Harrison snd the office seekers. Ths mayor should be given a nine foot start and the course should be over twenty miles in length. If they don't catch him in that time be wins. Be Wise in Time. You cannot keep well unless th. bowels are regular. Neglect of this rule of health invites half the sick nesses from which we suffer. Keep the bowels right: otherwise waste matter and poisons which should pass Rev. D. C. rishioner, Mr. Alex Tost, of Rowan, who has been quite sick reports him convalescing. C. In the Wake of tbt Measles. The little son of Mrs. O. B. Pal mer, Little, Rock, Ark., had th meas- Senator Cummins, of Iowa, deliv ered s speech in Washington the other day in which he took a gloomy view of the future of the country. With prophetic eye he sees bloodshed and revolution in the United States as an alternative method of remedying the wrongs nnder which the people of this land are "groaning." He thinks that the problem of the distribution of wealth must be solved by law or revolution. Senator Cummins needs a dose of liver medicine. out of the body find their wav into he blood and sicken the wUole sys-1 Mrg m Ulhemeli No. 5, wjui. uuu i wan uniu me ooweis are I r r -. u uj. vvuoMfiarau, 1HV 1JIWU1IIS M CI X 1119. They are the finest natural laxa tive in !the world gentle, safe and prompt and thorough. They strength en the stomach muscles, and will not injure the delicate mucous lining of the bowels. Bloodine Liver Pills 1 . . . I nave a constitutional action, that is, !. The result was sever cough tne longer you lake ttiem, the lessUhirf. . worgA and he conld not frequently you need them. They help deep. 6ne My8. 0ne ot Fo. Nature help herself and keep the u. tt,, .,i Tmr rjunmnnJ un. bowels healthy, bile active, and stom- piy cnred bim Md h, hM Mw aeh well. They never sicken, weaken beQ bothered sinee." Croup, whoop, or pnpe. mg congn( measles cough all yield to Mail orders filled by the Bloodine iriii. tt -j t.. r.j Corporation, Boston, Mass. 25c s box. The j, m the Uow packag """" I alwavs. Kefnaa mnstitntea. HoU bt M. L. Marsh, druggist. Foley Kidney Pills take bold of your system and help rid yourself of yotr dragging backache, do.ll head aehe, nervousness, impaired eyesight, snd all th ills resulting from the bladder. Remember it is Foley Kid ney Pills that do this. Bold by M. L. Msrsh, druggist. Every woman is a law nnto her husband. So far as can b observed from surf see indications, Gov. Woodrow Wilson seems to be far in the lead for the Presidency. He is one of the biggest and best men the country has produced in a generation, and would make a great -President. It is well not to forget, though, that your Uncle Champ Clark is going to be in the race. vf course, the Americans are al ways on the firing line, even if it isn 't their own. Shak it into Tour Shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, the anti-seoti powder. It cures painful, smartinf nervous feet, snd instantly takes the ting out of the corns and bunions. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight or new snoes leel easy, it u s certain curs for sweating, callous, swollen, tired, aching feet Always use it to break in new uhoes. Try it today. Bold everywnere. cents in stamps, uon't accept any substitute. For FREE trial package. address Allen S. Olmsted. Le Rov. N. I. While the government is investi ' gating trusts and monopolies, . why don't it torn its guns on the Pullman Palace Car Company t Thar is no monopoly in th United States that . will compare with it. w "ton are guilty, bub w will fix it so yon can do so some mor with out being guilty," is the apparent re sult of th Supreme Court's opinion in the Standard Oil ease. '' -(V Ths Standard .Oil . Company would hardly know what to do for recrea tion if it weren't ruthlessly dissolved once in a while, though it is not to W dissolved in tears. - , - :They are suffering from fly pest in- Texas, which leads to th impres sion that Col. George Bailey, of th I-uiton Post, has ceased swatting for Just Received NEW FABRICS For Summer Wear Comes another eosmogonist to assure us that tne .canals in Jnars are Out cracks in the planet. Much of our choice, first band information about the sjiars may be the result of cracks in the crammus of the eosmogonist. HetrwThlsf We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward (or any case of Catarrh that eaa not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. i. CHENSI CO, TOIMO, O. We. the onderalanvd. bava known F. J. Cheney (or the last 15 rears, aad bailey him perfectly honorable la all By mail for 25bulne transactions, and financially ny ma nrm. WJUdJlHU. KlKiHin MAKV1H. Wholesale Drusflsts, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cur la taken Inter nally, actlnc directly upon th blood and tnucoua anrfaeM of th 4mitm. While the Federal Senat is idlintr I Testimonials sent free. Prlo. f 60. ar away the time, the Democrttie House HaU'.miiWfoV Coastl- oi nepresentatives is uuung tne op-IPauoa. portunity to consider important meas ures in the interest of the people. W can promis you a dear, dean skin and a beautiful oomplsxloa if yon nsaZEKO and ZEKO SOAP accord ing to direction. - zj&aw u a slun DeautiOer and a TO CURB A 00LD TK OXB SAT Tsks Laxative Bromo (joimne Tab lets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E.W. Grove's siglatur oa every box. Card of Thanks Editor Times We desire, ihroogh i,tiflj. nMn.r.Hm M . t-.t. I th columns of your paper, to sxpress ment of cxema,pimpls, dandruff, and th many deeds all disesses of th sMa and scalp? ZE- 1"?.? hV? "f ,rin MO SOAP ia th nicest beat lathering 1"ueM ln W antiseptic soap yon ver need for tuiC 1 We f eelthU God wiU r. et or bath. .; r-. in rnnonnl U 1. Vr-Ji liarnaOOM, H. 1 Let us be properly shocked at the .. Mvami y. Mnlal in flhin Tm.lvfxr. If I tb ' IOUOWUg - reSOIUUonS of the members were elected by Adams nnanimously passed at regular meet. county methods is it strange that they v "7 , "T. ..ni. . .t tk.1. k..v - wommusionsrs, jaay una, utxxi , " " a" ' , I TJ l.J TV.I tk. J ; . . li sawivi ftjue AiAsait tin esULSLaiJ eyoau VVta Da Tot Havs th Sight Kind f Hsla. tmetion business of this departmrat, Foley Kidney Pills furnish th right ""m u "-" s kind of help to neutralise and remov "Jf - " th poison that cause headache back. , Resolved further, That aD aeeounts and bladder trouble. M. h. Marsh 's P""0 m nM0" r oar lwr" I nev for collection. i ' ; i 1 i - . : , - a ma ass hush aa ejuu toiwuvu w roley Kidney fills srs a tru med-1 follow these instruction. Ho pit idne. They r healing, strengthen-cell and settle at once and save any ing, anuseptw ana tonic, xney act i nnpieasani xeeiings. qnickly. Sold by M. L. Marsh, drnc-l .' GEO. H. RUTLEDGE, Mousselinc i Bordurc with beautiful Floral Border at 25 cents. Novelty Foulard Champane ground with different dots and figures at , 25 cents. Near Silk Foulard, look like silk and wear better, priced 15 cents. New Cluny Lace and New Inserting at 10c, 15c, 20c, and 25c Flouncings at , 50c, 75c and $1.00. Baby Irish Lace and Insert ings at 15c, 20c end 25c DR. J. S. LAFFERTY Practle HmltH to Kra I. Wau aad Throat d r'Htn (inM, oikc. ia to. -rr e miuinf, Room no. y.r ti'r. ., bavia i xna. OAmo aaura: I ta 11 a. uw aa 1 to c 1 f aLL . aU - -mm) Q a V. - j ' NotOnty a Lov Prcflt Over Cc:t, But a Lov Profit Over a Lov Gwt Hare You Ever Ycdrrcd Why Most Good Slioti Coma From M&tmcbusctti? A trarcHer la Switzerland Kiw a chlll of twelve doingf a won dcrfd pieca of embroidery and map- veiled, at the rrofiMfinrv of mirK youthful fingers.- "It isn't BUTtrisirig,w said his guide. 4rhat girlar parents, grandparents and great grandparents, back aa far aa she caa -reckon, were all lace or embroidery makers. They do nothing else in -this valley. Tie best of the world's best needlework comes from here. Tne Regal Shoe Corrpsry 1 . - In that section of Massachusetts. Has Long Deen the Leader whcr Regal Shoes are mode, shoe- ; Tnaking has been the principal in dustry for more than two hundred years. The best shoes made in the world come from this section, and it has been the Regal policy from its teginning to make Regal Shoes lead all the rest in quality.' for-price. To lead in both quality and low price is harder than to lead in either alone. It is easy to get quality if you don't care what it costs but to give that quality at a low price means the highest degree of science in rnanuiacturing in large volume, and straight-line, eco- ' nomical, direct, selling methods.. - - - t.-vi, . . Why Regal P.lanufachiring ' To begin with, the Regal factory and Selling Costs are Low. ; e(idpment is perfect. The Regal r - . manufacturing system is a marveiof economy. The Regal cost-accoonting, for example, shows the cost of : over two hundred operations and more than one hundred parts on 1 every shoe turned out, down to ahundredthqf a cent But most perfect of all is the Regal, direct-line tttttti? systemthe Regal's own, although copied to some extent by other manufacturers. Regal Shoes go direct- from the factories to you by the straightest, most economical route, cutting out jobbers, middlemen and large retailing profits, '- There is no lost motion, no lost time, no "over 6tock3,no DnTiecessary expense, anywhere. ,. . :Tk; . And Regal Shoes are now sold at cost of manufacture, plus five per: cent commission, -and this low cost of selling. . ' v Regal Shoes are the only shoes priced inv this wayilt ia the , only scientifiCr 3conomjcal, rsquare deal way of selling shoes. , You : gain not only by the low margin of manufacturing' profit but by the fact that this low margin is reckoned on a tow cost. Buying shoes as you buy ' , Whenyoubuy sugar, flour, eggs, beef, other nrcftiitifs of life J?mbeMr W one of a dozen necessi T . - ties, you pay a price reckoned on the wholesale market cost If the wholesale or manufacturing cost goes ' down, the retail price goes down. If it goes up, the retailprice goes up in proportion. When the retailer's profits are fair, this is fan -to. you. But this is not the way that shoes have been sold - Shoes have : always sold at fixed, "even money" prices always multiples of the half dollar. . - - ' ,-)- - ; - : But Regal Shoes hereafter will be sold in the scientific, economical waywith the profits . kept low and ; the- manufacturing cost as : the basis. - . ' " r This Stamp is your guar antee of the lowest pot iible price The price of every Regal Shoe is now reckoned at 5 per cent over actual cost plus the cost of getting the shoe ' from the factories to you. This price is CERTIFIED BY PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS AND STAMPED ON U .THE SHOE AT THE FACTORY. It is stamped just as it figures out in "odd" prices or in "even" prices and ; the old-fashioned arbitrary custom is done away with. - r , The stamp is your guarantee that the price is THE " , LOWEST FOR WHICH A' SHOE OF THAT CHAR e ACTER CAN BE BOUGHT, that nothing has been i added to conform to shoe-trade custom, that MORE of the price goes into, quality and LESS for profit and expense than in any other make you can buy. Reffal Price Aro Kov $3.35 to $5.85 alNtl VArS. WJt res Q " Fetesr Co. Good Work! JVb Experiments ! " . .IUVi ottf Trade Hark. ' Toat't what w do. ' SaaQ V pi Tin Soof oa your konsst. XLxj b - - ' yoa want ltl. - v 8Z3 ESAI5T GiCij-Bi: 'j G3. , T "c 17 :.i I !. nnmhaaeJ ontripht a dry preparation for cleaning ladies' " stents that I fnarante ta PT Mtia faction, or I will nak n ebarn for tb work.' I am ol wner f this preparation and a aeeoant of tb x ielUat satisfaction it has riven I make this nmnnsitinn to th laiiss sf Cot eord and vicinity x Send us any ar ticles or garments yon want sieanea and after w se tbis dry eleaning preparation o nthem, if they sr nol sntirely satisfied with tb work I will sank do ei.ir-, D. F. r IT Txzji'.at. Ttsss 1:3. - 1 lr lia yt 'nu. Charlotte, H, CL April I liu. . imill. D NUHUI. HKAWUHIJ 1IK li, - n. tiiwun awn BUHir. A mi - Wtbound trains lav Cbarlotta Mo, UK Sally. 1. a. n. rJo. 47, dally, 4.H p. sa Cantbound, dally: .'. - , No. 40. dally, t:M a. m. , , No. it dally, T:t a. m. -No. 4, dally, i: , m. -t-rf-..' -ri. : Va. Ill, dally, f.H a. as. ..vs :-: Trains arrlv ia CitarlQtta ea follows tyom th ti . . . No. Itt, .6 am.- . No 4, 11:01 noon. . -' '" " . Na. I. 19 ft p. oi. . .-5" ' Ko. 4, tJ p. as, -' :."" arrly from tii wti t ' '" " Va 41, 1S.0 a. a. ' ' Knu.tiKB, ., 8. a LjkARD, D. P. A, , JAff. KKB. Jr, T. P. A, ' . l Cbarlotta, R. C, ' gist. ' 24-8t. ' - Snpsrintendsnt. sa.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 30, 1911, edition 1
2
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