Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / June 19, 1914, edition 1 / Page 2
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!... l....w..J L...LY Iiww.E I a, aa KJULiu. mtmm Mi r.m.t ! ftU Telaaal , V a. T scavsCaurTtoa Oae Tear a. Moatae ItrM Moalae i.Se , SS 1M 0e e4 Ik arty aa4 by M taa SelU taw ! m IM Ballf Tilaaaa wlti pi u i Cm M Meat Si Moat ha Tv1t atoataa .9 J LIS IM , rt a mam's AJntoTwcawmm Aarentslaf retea caa Ve aa4 at Ute Soak Copy far (Ul But ee la ay I e'cieca. a. ay. Caroe a Taaaka. ltee-jlaUoaa af a eeect aa4 elmllar artlalaa are eaarweS 4 the rat af I eaata ear llaa case la Entered aa aeeeaS elaae na.ll aaattar April, I. lilt, at the aaetoffloe at Uoa eord. N. C madar tie act a( Marsa t, SOT. SLtlLBOAJD BCSIEDCLaV Eeetrre 11 a. aw Saar AerU la, ISl-a, NOBTHBOUTf IX Na, t, :lt am. Ma. 44 S:4 an. Na 14. 11:0 am. No. 44, 1:41 pm. No. 11. :4i pm. Na. IS, S:l pm. No. II. 14:11 am. No. 10. 11:H pm. No. 14. 14:11 am. SOUTHBOTlTD No. l. I IS am. No. '1. 4:45 am. No. 45, :!0 am. No. I?. I 15 am. No. 11. 10:10 am. No. T. 1:11 p.m. No. it, t:ii pm. No. 41, :4S pm. Na 11 t:ll pm. ALL TRAINS 8TOP AT CONCORD. Second Na IS, not ahowa abOTe. will atop at Coaoard t dlaehart- paaaea sera from aoutb of Atlanta, and aaeond Na IT will atop (or paaeeng-ers daatlned to polnta beyond Atlanta on A. ft W. P. Railroad. JOHIT M. 06LIUT, CVy Belter. FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1914. The report of the Bureau of Cen sua on cotton consumed, on hand, etc., for the month of May shows thnl 467,123 bales were consumed as against 481,093 for the same month lest year. The cotton growing States consumed 224,196 bales. On May 31 there were on hand 1,336,648 bales in manufacturing establishments and 047,230 bales in independent ware honses, a total of 2,314,378 bales of the old crops. There are 31,028,776 active spindles, or 472,799 more than in May last year, inc world 8 pro duction of commercial cotton, exclus ive of linters, as compiled from pub hshed reprots, documents, and corre spondence, was approximately 22,255, 000 bales of 500 pounds net. The con sumption of cotton (exclusive of linters in the United States) for the year ending August 31, 1913, was approximately 21,089,000 bales of 500 pounds net. Except for the United States, cotton included in this amount refers almost exclusively to that used in spinning and does not include large quantities which are consumed in the manufacture of felts, bats, etc. The number of active consuming cotton spindles during that year was 143,-398,000. Can any one wonder that the pub lie is compelled to make np the short age and make disbursements for ser vices which is has paid for before? If ever a trust needed looking into and shaking up, it is the Pullman trust. In fact, it ought to be arraign ed for peonage. Asheville Citizen. It is passing strange that in these days of investigation and regulation of trusts the "gigantic octopus' known as the Pullman Car Company, has escaped. It is the only absolute monopoly there is, so far as we know. All other great trusts have some show of competition, but the Pullman Com pany has none whatever. It has an absolute monopoly of the sleeping car business in the United States. What will the Colonel do now 1 He has been forbidden by his physicians to make speeches. While in London recenuy ne consulted on eminent tbroat specialist, who toM him after examination that his larynx is in bad shapyowing to the strain on it in the last Presidential campaign, aggravat ed" by the fever which attacked him in Bracil. Col. Roosevelt said to a New York World reporter: "It will be impossible for me to go into anything of a fight or continuous eampaign lor some months. I eould not make as mueh as one speech i day. This means that it will be im. possible for me to ennted, aa I had Been asked to do, any eampaign, eith tr primary or electorial." OLDEST EEXAT0 IS 11. MOTtCT "DEI" STATES. UBUS lata NOMNI titrate CoasUtatiaaal T.t4.. Hi 16 la lirtUay Today. 4 to Staita sy Kx. VWt&tm. n aamB(to, D. C, Jaae IS. Sen-! aahmjtoa, Jan 17. A eonati- tor Ieaaa Stepbeuaoc, of Wtaeoaua, wttoaei amaadmeat deaigaed to pnv aho baa the dtstinetioa af brio the t "dry" aUtea was ia trod need in oldcat waiWr of tba I'm ted Slatr tar areata today by Senator Dillinf. . - ii . i i ... . , ocvaia, mrorairo aia njrniT-nin aeai ai artaooL Instead ol pro birthday atuuTtraary today. Mr.. Btbitinf tba aalo for bererura por- Strpbeaaoa a term ia tba Sraata will poaea of intoxiratiDf Uqoor is the caa next Alsrrb and it is anderatood luted Utea, aa tba Uobaoa-SbeD- be will not be a candidate fur ro-rlee pard eonstitatiooal amaodiDent doe. tiua- tba Dillingham amendment merely xos eareer oi oenaior airpaettaoa proiutuU tba sraniportalioa into aRords a striking lUoatrmUoa of vhst'iUt for sals or ase t or any purpose may be aceomplishad by energy andjeontrary to tba laws of such stste. detenninatioB in tba faea ol obsta- Ita purpose similar to tba recently elea that many would regard aa in- enacted Kenyon laws, but it would surmountable. His birthplace waa a ( remove all qoastioos at to tba ralid small form near the rity of Fredar-'ity of tba legislation embraced in ktou, X. B. His parents were ei-ltoMw mrasnma. tremely poor and young Stephenson , v , was not able to acquire mors than anj A Wnito Farm elementsnr education before be bad Q. Brownell. in The Progressive n 1,1 to araui..oia parenisi Farmer. in u,.K.rtinghe ranuly. Vhen a During a recent vacation spent in n . i !:,! h.- went to Bangor, Me., and the North, wa were driven through .i N.ai later he joined a family going a most prosperous eountv, lined with i.. it.. wii.i of Wisconsin to seek a beautiful farm homes. new, lame. Among others we passed a white me iuiure senstor worited Hard, farm. The bouse was white, the and faithfully and at the age of 17. barns were' white, the fences were uuwea i.iu acres oi una near janes ville. Wis., and helped put in 400 acres of wheat In the winter he v ent to the lumber region and hauled logs with a team of sixteen oxen. In 1847 he waa placed in charge of a lumber ramp and in 1850 he engaged in the lumber business on his own account. During the summer he sail ed a vessel between Milwaukee and Escanaba aifl when winter, came he returned to the hard work in the lumber camps. In 1857 Mr. Stephenson purchased a quarter interest in some timber and saw mills and later he acquired con trol or rne corporation, wbich was capitalized at $700,000. About the same time he became associated with William B. Ogden, Chicago's first mayor, in the Peshtigo Company, with a capital of $1,500,000 and built for it the larpest woodenware factory in tne world. Mr. Stephenson was the first man (o tow barges on Lake Michigan. In association with Jesse Spaildink and William L. Strong he organized and built the Sturgeon Bay Canal, which was afterwards sold to the govern ment. He was selected by the lumbermen of Wisconsin in 1867 to devise a plan for runiing logs on the Menomiee River and built the boom that handles more logs than any other in the woild. He became president of the Stephenson National Bank of Ma rinette and head of several of the largest lumber companies in the coun try. He placed the first steamboats on the rivers of Wisconsin and the neighboring States. The public career of Senator Ste phenson dates from 1866, in which year he was elected to the Wisconisn legislature. In 1883 he was electad X3 Congress and retired voluntarily after having served three terms. He did much to advance the political in terests ot Robert M. LaFollctte and v as a candidate for the Uniter States btnate when the late Joseph Quarles was elected, and again when Mr. Lafollette was chosen at th end of Senator Quarles' term. Mr. btepbenson came to the Sen ate in 1907 to fill the unexpired term of Senator Spooner who resigned. Later he was elected for a full term of six years. After his election charges were made by his political oponents htat he had been elected ec as a result of corruption. After a tuU investigation of the matter the Senate Committee of Privileges and Elections reported that the charges were not proven. white. Milk-white eows were graz ing in the fields and snow-white chickens were running upon the lawn. A hnge white dog lay upon the grass and a white horse, with u white harness and white carriage was hitched to a white post by white strap. The white gravelled drive was bordered with white rocks. A white fountain threw up a white spray, while white ducks floated be neath. Just as we drove by, a lady dress id in pure white, with white shoes, stepped out of the door and seated herself in a white hammock. The white effect was most strik ing, and was an excellent example of advertisement without expense. The cost would have been the same if no attention bad been paid to one color. There was no need of giving a name to that farm. It is known as the White Farm for miles around and is one of the show places of the district. The same idea, of course, could b? carried oue with other shades. FRECKLES Now is the Tims to Oat Bid of These Ugly Spots. There's no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as the prescription othine double strength is guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of othine double strength from Gibson Drug Store and apply a little of it night and morning and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have be gun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom that more than an ounce is needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complex ion. Be sure to ask for the doubls strength othine as this is sold under V.TSuarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles. adv. Newman Says Some' line. ri i i oaiicDury, June 17--Walter George Newman, who was iu Salis- Dury wben the stones reached here anout the boosting of his Gold Hill company on the Senate stationery, uinuo tne sflTe cxpiaaationthat was given by the Senators that a sten ographer had copied the letters on stationery without the knowledge of the Senators and that that was all there was to it. Wouldn't Receive Money From a Dance. Charity and Children. Some time ago we copied the state ment from the Presbyterian Stand ard that the Alexander Rescue Home, a small Presbyterian orphanage of Charlotte, was to be given the pro ceeds from a dance on the 20th of May. Subsequently this notice ap peared in the Standard which we publish with real pleasure: "We are glad to be able to say that what ever may have been the intentions of the managers of the danee at the auditorium tba twentieth of May week, to give one-half of the proceeds to the Alexander Rescue Home, the managers of that Home have never had any intention of receiving it. They have in past, years, wo learn, refused to accept the proceeds of the Charity Ball, and they do not now iniend to break their record." TRADE IN CONCORD. PARAGRAPHS. Many of us will be inclined to leave the faulty map of Brazil to be fix ed tip properly by the catographers unaer tne stern eye of Col. Roose velt - Mr. Mellen's disclosures are, how ever, not a part of the railroads ap peal for high freight rates. . . a -; , Jfana may like an opera without words, but it will never stand for a ehoros Without girls. . . . ---a "-- - . -v We understand that the Bull Moos ers think the initials G. O. P. stand for Greedy Old Party. ' ,. L - '..'.;'.;, ;---:;: '-"r France is to honor Col. Roosevelt who is to reciprocate by making the occasion as interesting as possible. He always does. ,, a a Investors in the New Haven Rail- . -J IL.' .. . I All Play and No Work That's the way a vacation should be, isn't it? - With no time for cooking, yet the pleasures and activities of vacation the rebuildinc time demand wholesome, noariah inf food. Try ' Ik EID TOO EVU MEET HXMf Tee FeOov We Balds tae Bcreaa Door Open WaHe He Stands an the Ontaide and Talks te Tern. Salisbury Peat. Taare ara plenty of them about; probably yon bare mat bin some time or other. We mean the fd low who strps ap to your door, stands on tba out side and talks to yon oa the inside and at the earn time taken hold of the errarn duor and pulls it wide open and holds it that way while he talks to yon. Did yon ever meet hint Of ourae yoa eould not bear bin talk if he did not do this, bis voice will not penetrate the wire netting over the door. This fellow is a first rousia to the fellow who leaves the door wide open in January and February; who always walks to the left, and who holds the end seat in the church and the moving picture theatre. His tribe is many and tbeyre increas ing. Yea, yon 've met him. WHETHER YOU USE CALOMEL OK NOT Yon Win Realize How Much Better for Yon This Safe Vegetable Rem edy Wfll Be. The liver is such a delicate organ that most people have learned from experience the danger of. flogging it into action with the dangerous drug calomel Gibson Drug Store sells anj recommends Dodson's Liver Tone, a pleasant-tasting, harmless vegetable liquid that encourages the liver, re lieves constipation and . biliousness without restriction of habit or d$et. There are no bad after-effects from taking Dodson's Liver Tone. It does just what it is intended to do' and no more. - Doson's Liver Tone cannot harm either children or grown-ups and is an excellent preventive of chronie liver troubles. Gibson Drug Store sells Dodson's Liver Tone for 50 cents per bottle and every bottle sold is guaranteed to give satisfaction, and you get your money hack without a question if it fails you. Some remedies are sold in imitation of Dodson's Liver Tone look out for them. Remem ber the guarantee. adv. . ROCKY RIVER. Crops are looking better since the rain. Harvest-is about over. There is lots of corn to plant yet. The Irish potato crop is verv poor in this community. Wheat and oats are not vcrv irood in this community. The little son of Mr. A. L. Furr is 8ick. r Messrs. Henry Furr, Arcliev and Luther Cagle attended Church nt Love's Grove Sunday. Mr. Alonzo Furr visited relatives in Stanly Saturday and Sunday. He re ports poor crops in that county. He said that cotton was just coming up. We have mumps in the neighbor hood. The writer is looking to take tfcem at any time. Farmers are working hard, irettin: ready tor the tourth of July. B, NO. 7 TOWNSHIP. nev. air. rox preacnea a fine ser mon last Sunday at St. Stephens E. Lu unurcn. Mrs. Albert Hammill returned her home at Palmersville last Sun day, after spending some time with her tather, Mr. G. A. Culp. Master William Arthurs returned to his home in Charlotte Sundav. at ter spending several weeks with his grandfather, Mr. J. H. W. Eudv. Mr. Rufus Misenheimer. who has been seriously ill for some time, is worse at uns writing, we are sorry to note. Mrs. Catherine Barrier is seriously ill at this writing. . Mr. Arthur T. Eudv spent Rundnv in v imnoiie. w. K. 11 Its delicate sweet, delicious flavour Is particularly appeal' ing during the hot months when the appetite lags. Made of whole wheat and barley, essential elements for re-building the and nerve centres. Grape-Nuts contains the body especially brain Grape-Nuts ia partially pre-dlgested the starch sells brok en down to aid quick, easy digestion. And you know one feels cooler and more comfortable in hot weather on easily digest' ed food. It's easy to serve Crarc-Nuts. Just ptr .Lt is wanted direct from the packigs, all cream or rulk and suear. Cone's Annie Orchard. Charlotte Observer. When Mr. Moses Cone laid out th. apple orchard on his estate at RW. ing Rock, he was told by those who knew that he had selected tbe-wrons exposure and that he would never get crop. Mr, Cone, however, was not setting out the apple trees just for me Deauiy or their blossoms and wa confident he would reap a crop in due wine, ine orenard is now but fairlv matured and an item from The Le noir News says it will this season produce 40,000 bushels of apples for me marKets. , it must be conceded that this is doing Drettv well for on. orcnara, and goes to show that appl "tea piamea anywhere on a North Carolina mountain will bring results. Fourth of July Reduced Rates. -. On account of the fourth of July holiday, the Southern Railway will sell round trip tickets to and from all points at greatly reduced rates. Dates of sale July 2nd, 3rd and 4th, with final limit July 7th, 1914. -. For further information apply to nearest agent. R. H. DeBUTTS, D. P. A., Charlotte, N. C. : HOW FAMOUS ACTRESSES BANISH 8UPESFLU0U3 HAIR. ' BETTY LORRAINE, the popular ac tress who baa scored such a srreat sneeeaa In "The Little Parialonna" and other eomadlaa; wrltea: "l hsatrl.nl women are now uilnir a remarkHb.e prescription that quickly removea ail trace ot unalghtly hair growth W.,, out Injury to the akin. It la b ( -i-irood a Wonder. It a. ia like rr" a rml la abaolutely hnrnn-n. I.i -... electric needle, prfrt aufetr. l-o ii ia.-U-a.LU. etW SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. - r.:rzo. oude n. czllaov, - Representing the Pictorial Review Com pany, of New York, will be at our Pat tern Department CatUTday,Juno 20. Mrs. Bellamy is an expert on styles and dressmaking and you ar cordially invited to avail yourself of her advice and sug gestions. , ..' . s- We will be glad to have you visit our Pattern Department and learn ' from Mrs! Bellamy how to use Pictorial Review patterns the simplest in operation, the most economical in material arid the very latest in style. ' The onlyv patterns with which are furnished Cutting and Construction Guides. PARKS-BELlt . COMPANY flU1(lMniM)tH Solves the Problem of Decorating Your Walls D HIS Modern, Sanitary Durable Flat Oil Finish seta a new standard for decora ting Walls and Celling, it has taken theplaceof old-fashioned and unsanitary wall paper and other material PnCfPtaOfoatt comes in 24 soft, deep, velvety colore which can be combined into most artistic effects. : It le very economical and If eolled a Pet Get Ftatkoatt-td wall la easily cleaned with a damp sponge. . Let us Help You with Plans and Advice : Write to Decorating Depart ment, PEASLEE-GAULBERT CO., Inc., LoulevUle, Kr., re garding your wulli and ceilings. Eipert decorators will gladly assist you, free of charge. ETTCHIE HABJDWAKE CO. ' FREE BOOK "Th Modem Met hid o Finishing alao color car4 contains 1 tiff . J I u S -3 r aawrad ikat year plunbiag anuipaMnl caa bt aatuiwiory a Jaiga, Jural.- y anu pna, il yoa make yew electioa Iron, em ' la ai 1 tCf i uoi. j I .Jute. j E. B, CZX2X ' PUMP. THAT'S RIGHT J ' ii y , hi Slip your feet into a pair of our Colonials you will not only be, in the height of fashion but you will find they are the most perfect fitting comfortable pumps you ever wore. - ?: They feel comfortable from the very first time you put them on until they wear out , . - All Sizes. $3.50, $4.-00 and $4.50 v All widths. Let us fit your foot as it should be fitted. w-5 "GOOD SHOES THAT WEAR LONGER" XXmXX0XXX9XXX9XXXXXX9XXxJi 0 I -iltev Telephone Saved Child's Life ' ' A?ue 5 ch,!drtn Wl into a water tank on an Alabama farm and was rescued unconscious and 1 pparenthr lifeless. The frantic mother rushed to toe telephone and called the doctor six miles away. -He told her what to do and started at once, but T before he arrived the child was out of danger. The protection of women and children is only "one of the chief values of the. telephone on the ' larm. , . . , You can have this service at small cost See ' t..e nearest Dt.l Telephone Manager or send a rc-tJ for our free booklet ' ; y rAnnsns line Dr?AiiT7,isrrr -? r? , . ' r ro.-ij nriu inrir money were soon part-' ei, J- r;-pont '.Morgan was' r-M,,.: 1 ! I a , !' " can.lidalc 1 f 1 i.i ; m i- 11 f ' - .VpliHtoriaa, it d It Ima solved Die t . Obkoo.1 a r.orr.'ine ,r h r i i nn I t s.l! or 1 li.it I t In .--. i f . su.l by C every where.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 19, 1914, edition 1
2
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