ike cc:;ccr3 c'iit mEim tpb asmhiatku mrat. X B. Mir.HRII L, SMItar JOH M. OtiLCSBT, CUT ICaUlaaw SVrll Trlaaa W. I' IBIOHrTIOH UTU. Ota Tear Q i Ifnnlkl I.4 Threa Months On Month -4 of f HIT aa fcr toltow ms artrea Ik Mr TlttiM waV -. pravailt Twelve Months ......... ..... S-J . BIS nnnin .n i " Unnk 1 . 1 rVBLISUER AJINOVWCaMIBlW. i . k W. . .1 tat jiinnwiiip rr 1 - - fflea. Copy for change' sanat a la a'clork a. m. Entered wond claaa mall ajtat AortL . 1910. t the poatafltca at Caa crrf, N. C under tha act af Mareh t UT. Entered awond rises mall mattee at the postoflW nt Concord. M. C a er the act of March t, 117. RAii.no n pchedtjlb K-It nnlny. JfTmKr . W WORTH BOT SO OrTHllOtJfIB No. i. 4:1 a:n. No. 44. 40 am. No. . 1" " No. 4, J 4! pm. No. 13, 45 pm. No. pm. Nb. 81, 1:' pm. No. l. 15 am No. SI. S:l am No. 4V T No. 7 : am No. It. ls:l am Nv 7. 4 pm No. SS, :! pm No. 4. -4 aai No. n. 1' "l ALL TRAINS 'STOP AT CONCOBTA MONDAY, JANUARY 11. 1915. The imrai.'inlion bill which passc" the lloie of KepreSentatives last sprint: by a two to one vote, 23 ngainst 126, lws passed Hie 1'iiitot' States S.nate by tlie overwheluiinv vote of 50 air.-iinst ". The bill is now in confoivneo and it will be present'.')' to the Pnsld. nt for his signature ii a few days. This bill praeticaUy ex 'eludes all foreigners from eomiiii; t. this (uantry unless they can read oi write, and but few of them can 1 so. It i; rep nt -d tliat President Wil son will veto the bill as lie is opposei' to excluding fi't'eiiiers on the ground that they cannot read or write, but President V," " n has '"said noth ing" on the subject and it is not be lieved that lie will cto this bill whicl is overwhelmingly demanded by the American people. We liavc been al lowing foreigners to come into tlii country in unlimited numbers and they have been eomimr in at the rate if more than a million a year. About 95 per cent, of them will not work on the farms and ti'cvo huddle around the bij; cities where they have necunv uiateit in sucii jarire numners mai thev are a menace to this country. It is well known that you can have Mont anyone murdered in the city of New York for .fio.OO. Such a trade ns "Professional Gunmen" has been shown to be responsible for the mor dcr of many people in New York and other lare cities. The time has come when boili the learned and illit erate foreigner should be cxsluded un til America shall have fully assimilat ed and Americanized those that are here. The people of the United States are overwhelmingly behind their Con gresssmen and Senators in passing this bill. The President's address made at Indianapolis last v.cek was indeed re freshing. There was no studied rhet oric, no "rounded periods," but a presentation of views in language that everybody can understand. Mr. Wilson met all issues candidly and squarely, and he is much stronger in the estimation of the people than be fore the speech was delivered. Sen ator Overman said in commenting on the President's address: "I hope sincerely that the Presi dent will run for re-election in 1916, as indicated in his speech. I am for him myself and think the people of this country want him. They want the policies which he so magnificently defended at Indianapolis last night, carried on, and they want aa oppor tunity, in voting for him directly, to express their approval of these poli cies." It begins to look as if, the people who have been eating biscuits for a long time will have to come down to corn pone. It is how predicted that wheat will go to two dollars a bushel. It seems that it will be not only a question of price but also a question of supply. So serious has become the probability of shortage that there has begun a national "agitation to place an-embargo on the exportation f wheat and flour. While America pro duced the largest crop of wheat in her history, the size of the crop in foreign countries ' was considerably less than usual, and American wheat eannot feed the whole world.,; The high 3 price - of !,; wheat - will also rcaa a higher price for corn on c count of the iacreased.. demand. X0DERJ7 SOStXS SCORED. Sandy Daclam SfHy Mothers And ratasra Sal CtCdreea. Philadelphia, Jan. 9. Fifty thous and men and women heard and 31 000 3 1 re tried bat failed to bear Billy San day today declare that ailly niotu srs, indifferent fathers and irreliiriouf condition generally in present day American homes were breeding mil lion! of boy drunkards and ruined rirls every year. More than 200,000 persons thus far have listened to the sky-rocket evan gelist deliver his scathing denuncia tions of the devil durin; tb first five days of his campaign in this city. "Glory to (iod! ' screamed an old woman, jumpinj to her feet, as Sun lav delivered his attuek on the family life. "Just a minute, sister,'' shouted back the evangelist. "Hold your sparker back a little and save gaso line." "Our national life will never rise 'lisjher than our home life." he said, is he launched forth into bis sermon m 'Home, Sweet Hon-.e. ' "Our wom n, as a rule, are silly, frivolous, ex travagant, and they have thrown to the winds all modesty, prudence, re ligion and the virte.es that arc ?o ,?t tractive in women, and have allowed themselves to be flattered. cj led and bamboozled by a let of jilted jays with cracked characters. They turn their homes into third-rate enmbline dens and booze joints. They have vaudeville in their homes; they in dulge in gambling and the average society woman today is more famil iar with the names of fancy wines and champagnes than she is with classic literature or the Word of Ood." "You women can make a heaven of a home or a hell of a home. Don't turn your old catling-gun tongue loose and rip up your husband and everybody else and send then out of their homes. "If a boy will not obey his fathor and mother he will not obey the so cial laws. It is from such that an archists, nihilists, bomb-throwers and cutthroats are made. One of the d in ger signs of our time is the curse of the idle mother. Many a woman nev er darns a stocking, but they manage .... .1.- ,.i i i . I iu unu; ineir oui u.ii c.isses around '")V j,0 some ondge party, some Dutcli iuneit,'( some opera, some lasiuonaole dress maker or milliner. They never go to help the ppor; they never trv t bridge the chasm and help the fellow with the dinner bucket. "You" mothers ought to fit your selves to be intellectual companions of your children. Make companions of your children instead of letting the saloon get them. If the motherhood of this country were no better than the manhood. God surely would dump the whole thing into hell and ipiicklv stop it." Taking No Chances. "When I get to heaven," said a woman to her Baconian husband, "I am going to ask Shakespeare if he wrote those plays." "Maybe he won't be there," was his reply. "Then you ask him," said the wife. Son "Say, mamma, father broke this vase before lit- went out." Mother "My beatiful majolica vase! Wait till he comes back, that's all." "Son "May I stay up till he does!". 'BUNCOMBE.' It Don't Always Pay to Be Skeptical When a newspaner writer nnd proof reader that works nights canJ tesd himself out of dyspepsia, wbich most all that class suffer with, it is worth while to know the kind of food used. This man says : Being a newspaper writer and'co!le"e as lie was reported to have proof reader, also a eradiiate in nxdicine as well, though not practic ing, makes a combination that would produce skeptic on the subjec t if any thing would. "Day after day- I read the proof on the Grape-Nuts advertisements with1 the feeling that they were all 'buncombe.' All this time I was suf fering from dyspepsia from the im proper food I was. eating at the res taurant. "One day I saw a package of Grape-Nnts at the restaurant and tried some with cream. The food took my fancy at once. After a few lunches on it at midnight I noted an improvement in my feelings, and was able to work with less fatigue. "I have used Grape-Nnts as a reg ular diet since then, and have im proved greatly. The c-Id dyspepsia and bad feelings that I thought were necessary adjuncts jto night work dis appeared, and I am able to do much mora and tetter work with less effort than ever before. - . "1 was nearly ready to give up and seek health in some other walk inlife but thanks to my change in diet I am now all right." "Theres a Reason." Name given by Postnm Co., Battle 0?k, Mic&. :X . 'r Look in pkgs. for the famous little book, "The Road to Wellville." , Ew . read tha abort letter? A new one appears from time to time. may art gemuaev una. and full of KTSTZSXOTjS EAT3 Ef NOUWOOD TODAY Rosa Toner is Tonnd Dead ta WsQ By Ksgro Husband Wao is Bali By tha Coroner. Norwood, Dee. 9. Last night about 6.20 screams were beard from the di rcction of the house where Jala Tur ner, a negro, lived, with his wife, Rosa. The place was in darkness. Those who heard the screams made no investigation. This morning Jule went to a neigh bor and borrowed a windlass, to elean out his well. Later be went to the same neighbor and said: "I got to tell you some bad news. I found Boss in the well." This neighbor notified Police Chief W. O. Smith, who summoned the cor oner from Albemarle. The latter ar rived late this afternoon,, and eon ducted an inquest. Blood waa found on stones between the back door and the well, and a bloody axe handle was found near the well However, on removal of the body from the well, where it was fo f d floating face downward in about four feet of wa ter, no wounds were to be discovered. There was testimony of some pre vious trouble between the man and the woman. The finding of the jury was to the. effect that the woman had been plac ed in the well by Turner, and he was held in default of a bond of $1,000. The affair has caused much excite ment, as it is the first of the sort in the history of the town, and both ne groes were well known, having been born and reared here; Farming Ont State Convicts Most End Says Henry A. Page. Raleigh. Jan. 9. Henry A. Page, of Moorr county, took five shots at the State convict question today and pre sented bills in the house that will make impossible the exchange of prison lalior for ditches through high grounds and fills in low lands. Mr. Page offered just five of these bills which will repeal the sections of the 1!0!) and 1007 acts farming out convicts for the Mattamuskeet, the Elkin and Alleghany, the States ville Air Line, the Transcontinental and other roads. It is not understood neral assembly that all of icse projects are of enual riskiness as concerns the State's stock, and moreover, some of them nre said to be quite promising. Put Mr. Page wants the State to get the money for this convict hire. That is all.. Told of a Young Han. China drove Record. Dide you ever walk three miles with your girl from a Christmas exercise over frozen roads? Well, when he arrived at the home of his lover and w as asked in. he thanks her, bids her good night nnd departed through the woods, making his way towards home nnd arriving in time for breakfast. In a day or two this young man had corns on his heels. A good cure for the heel disease would be to make the trip now. Young man, are you guilty t A Fact. Durham Herald. It is a fact that we have poor il literate people in North Carolina and it is perhaps a fact that some chil dren are employed -in cotton mills who should be in school, yet those outsiders who are always telling ns of it will net materially benefit the situation. And speaking of actual poverty, yon will find more of it in cr? block of New York or most any other Northern city than in the whole of North Carolina. Let It Pass. Everything. The fact that the boys remain in Trinity; fact that the good Bishop hasn't started to apologize for hav ing had anything to do with the great saia ne would, let us forget it. Now and then a man's mouth goes off half cocked; now and then he doesn't know it is loaded and accidents or ally happey to us all. Let's, let it pass. "Why do epitaphs always begin, !Here lies V " "Because the majority of them do." THE 8ILVER RIVER. -Farewell, I. said, sweet meadow Brass; '. - Farewell, I let the light wind pass. t watch the shadows on by : one. Farewell, tbon gold alow setting son. . I go wttbm and fold my nanda ' : Ob, wondrous are tna . day's . bright lands . . . And evening's robe of reseat hem I ' - . ' But dearer now my dreams of them. - - ?'t',';':--'.,"'i y'S ' ..r ; s'1'' s The stars t know creep to the ty. - The moon will soon be swim- tnlng high. O light tilled pools and silver stream! v O silver river ef my dreams! -, " -Atlantic Monthly, C0TT02T SXACHLS KIW sxan leyhi ros ssasos This Week Promise Hart Activity, u PrioM Kew Permit ef TwoJSidJ 4 Mark New Orleans, Jan. 10. General buying last week put the priee of cot ton pp to new bigs levels for the sea son, tha market closing 3d to 33 points over tha previous week's close. Considerable realising waa don by longs. Bears met advances by fresh offerings of abort cotton and some little hedging waa don by Southern spot holders. Tb market, however, had good support of a speculative character and also from buyers who were hedging against the-.r wants in the actual staple.' This element wss most eonstHenonsly represented by German spinners ard spot merchants. The export movement was on the heaviest aeale of the season, with clearing for January promising to exceed those of January last year. The large freight demand from cot ton shippers for sailinirs and reports that American mills were bey-nnintr to buy ahead heavily increased bul lish sentiment. Bears claimed that the advance had been too rapid and that a reaction was imminent. This week promises more activity. for prices have reached a level which allows a more two-s'ded market than has been possible of late. The demand for export find the at titude of Southern spot holders will be closely watched. Child Labor on the Farm. Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 8 The farmer who makes his children get out of bed before daylight and do hard work about the farm and keeps them out of school so they may do more work is as great or a worse offender against child labor laws as the mill owner who employs children, accord ing to Prof. E. -C. Merry, superin tendent of the Fulton county schools and chairman of the county's special! child labor commission. "I have seen country children! come to school so worn out from ! work at home that the teachers l?tj them go to sleep at their desks pure-1 ly out of pity," said Mr. Merry. "I have beeom-3 convinced that the farm er is as great an affender against the spirit of the child labor law as any mill owner. Some of them seem to have no consideration for the wel fare of their children. There is a great deal of sympathy fcr the mill child, but you hear nothing of the overworked little farm boy are girl." Soldier Wounded in Peculiar Man ner. London, Jan. 9 The Reuter cor respondent in Amsterdam sends the' following story told by a wounded German soldier: "From one of the trenches, I aim ed at my adversary, 70 yards away. It was an easy shot, and I was sure cf success. I was just pulling the trigger. My aim was clear, my bul let could not fail. Suddenly I staggered back, nnd when I recovered I fonnd my rifle damaged at the lock and the cham ber. I had an ugly wound in my forehead. I examined my rifle, and found in the barrel a French and a German bullet, both flattened. What had happened J "After close examination I discov ered that a French bullet had enter ed mv rifle at the muzzle, had follow, ed the course of the barrel, had ex ploded my cartridge and the bntt of my riflo had thus wounded me." Want to Repeal Calf-Slaughtering-Act Raleigh, Jan. 9. The introduction of a bill reDcalinar an net unnlvinrr to , j I , O I Rowan county relating to the slaugh-J ter or calves, - by Representative Brown today, is understood to move toward a statewide law against the killing of veals. ' Mr. Brown announced that Le d'd not interfere with anv other co m! v . . j and several are touched by a similar act to that of Kowan. By h:ivii;g a law that onprutpa avniniir hia nu-n county but allows a dealer from the outside to interfere with the horut trade, Mr. Brown declares that the b'li worked a hardship. .j. Set tha War ia Your Home. " -I A truly remarkable series of Euro pean war pictures are being distri buted in separata supplement form with every copy of the The New York Sunday World from week to week. They portray graphically what is go ing on at the various battle fronts in the world's createst conflagration' I These Sunday World war-picture sup plements are well worth preserving. Be sure and get tha one that goes with next Sunday's New York World and see how interesting they are. Order irom your newsdealer in advance. . Now a tidy little police flotilla to keep , tb fighting away from these eoaata would help a good deal and would prove aa excellent example to Europe. " " s Evidently the cruiser Dresden wss n6t rnade'of the fragile china for whith Dresden ia famous. r CLr Ttst t;tt K Hct The Rtsl -w a Umit laxative eftrct, I.AXA, liy t HRoOOujNIr.iJi. bcitrrth.a ordinary P 'ne aad dm aot cum Mmnmi aor ''"''' a htad. InmMr the loll Mine and mms tvr Um swaatan al K. W. aova). la. WSAf WILL in,ICTl -- tTOHACH TXOnlS A Hard Qnsetloa But Thil Eatirtd Ohio ' Taisctr Aruvwra H Mr. HatUsoa'a StatamtsiU At Xalia kl ' Upper Sandusky, Ohio. ''I suffer. d trom nervous dyspepsia and stom ach trouble so that large lumps wonld seent to eom up in my throat, and would get so diuy I could not stand up or even see. I tried diOfrant remedies but nothing seened t help n until one day my druggist told me afoot VinoL I tried it and soon noticed an improvement and now I am welL" IRA T.' MATTESON, Upper Sandusky, Ohio. 1 Yinol seldom fails to strengthen and tone np the tired, overtaxed and weakened nerves of the digestive or gans and remove the cause ct indi gestion and soon ensbles the sufferer to digsst with ease th foods that one caused distress. Yinol also cre ates a healthy appetite and builds np weakened run-down system. - We have such faith in VinoL our delicious . cod liver and iron tonic without cil, that we ask every person in this vicinity suffering from, ner vous dyspepsia or stomach trouble to try Vinol on our offer to return their purchase money if it fails to benefit. Gibson Dm Store, Concord 1. C, and leading drug stores every where, adv. LADY SHOCKED SY CTJURENT. Electric Fair Dryer Knocks Davidson Woman Unconscious. Davidson, Jan. 9 Mrs. M. G. Ful ton was the victim last night of what Io.d nt first to be a very serious accident, in the way of a shock by an electric current. Before retiring for the night she undertook to nse n new electric hair dryer. For some reason th apparatus did not work properly and she sustained a severe si'ock, under which she fell to the floor. ITer scream, as she . fell brought Professor Fulton quickly up stairs to Fee what was the trouble. He found ''.'ex Iving on th? floor and unconscious. Giving what relief he could, he then hnrried over to the rosidcn"e of Dr. LingK nnd snnrTon ed a physHnn. It -was a half-honr or more bof re Mrs. Fulton regained consciousness. For a long while she was in danger of a nervous collapse, though no furtbpr ininrv was in evi denee. One of 'her fingers was pain fully burned. "Poverty may be a blessing in dis- giliue." ' ,:r; "No doubt," replied Miss Cayenne, "but it i sneh a sifall blessing and such a big disimisc." The burniniir of his "ranie" fac tory will give Mr. Thomns Edison oe eniWion for the sleepless nights which he commends as aid to health and happiness. TrarTa lit flxnMvM It 'a ! trie THE JUDICIARY.; Legislature and executive are uiemiH Kivfii to allow the pvopl to do what tin-- please under cer tain roust itiitiouiil forma Till" Ju fllcUiry Is n menus Kiven to pre vent the KHile from doing -what tliey please. How. ran we el-,1 plain tlu filet tluit these Judicial restrictions are of tbe very s- j seuoe of freedom? I "answer, because the law of tbe United, St ii ten. na defined and adminis tered b.v lt courts, represents nut only restraint, but self re stmlat. and tbe, kind of self re st mint wlili-b tbe nation must, be ' prepared 'to exercise if It bones peruinnently to enjoy tbe advan tage of political freedom. 1 President A. T. Badley, Yal University. , NORFOLK S0UTHEEV B. 1.-. Schernled Effective Octottr 4, 1J1J No. 84, mixed train, Jeavs Char lotte 8 a. m., daily, except Sunday arriving Mt. Gilead 12:40 p. am. No. 32 leave rharlntt ' dailyr arrivbg Asheboro 9:2t p. m., connecting at star lor - aiaaksnn Springs. : . - No. 89 leave Ashbora daily exeepl Sunday at 1:10 a.-m., arriviag Char lotte at 12:35 p. m. ! ' -No. 70 leaves Aberdeen 7:20 a. m., except v Sunday; leave' Jacksdb Springs at 8:06 a. nu, connecting at Star for Charlotte, ' M " No. 85, mixed train, leaves Mt Gil ead 4 a. daily except Sunday, ar riving Charlotte 7:20 a. m. . ' roa sale. A desirable five-room cottage, M AO x 300 feet; good stable and out buildings on East Corbin street, op posit the new graded school building This property i. near the busines part of the city and is desirable plaee V lirav Tetrns easy. , i 4NO .K. PATTERSON." roa SALE. ... Forty-three acres two miles sonth of depot, between railroad and Na tional highway at Whit 1111. Splen did six-room cottage, onChuilnjra. orchard and pasture. ; A desirable nlar to live, . ..,:'- ':.. - .Trad la Concordit's tha jlaos. HzzdSk:.:i Up? Can't Brcal'is? . Try ihz ilzvo External Treatment la Safe Fans Ova TWos fUBsvaa Vf taaiktina Vapor treatateaU ar bast tsr all la flanunaUo of U air passages. Tb vapors Barry ta BMdieaUoa. direct to tb inflamed saxfae without disturbing ta sumacs, as do Internal medicines. A cheap and very eosivenieat vapor treatment is a good 'application . ef Vkk's "Vsp-O-Bnb" Croup and Pneu monia Salra over tb throat and ebmt, covered with a warm flannel eloth.- Tb body beat releases vapors of - Thrmoi. Eucalypto!, Menthol, Camphor, and Pin VICICS&SS&Z&SALVE JUST THINK OF IT! These cold w'nter days, instead -of fussing over an old cook stove with no moJern improvernents, come , in and let us show you your handsome, new 7 Malleable Range Eternal , It's the best thirg on the market.' Ten to one if-you -see it you'll leave an order to have h put in your home at once Price arranged on terms to suit you. . LOWE BROTHERS & CO. The Store that Bays Anything and Sells Everythiog 1; KANNAPOLIS; JV. 47. i a i "W VSs Ihssl Write VfettBMBnaAMMiBii1aaa thTJIettmarraf ma-ltfl faato ??Ln eiywb in 3-nr bottlM: 10c (1 oij. 25c U oaJi. He oa, X Fiat tot (DoIlarX AlMiasaantedHaadrOilCa.25cOin.). .T 3-IN-ONK Bib COMPANY : f Ill 4ieAPoww - Ht Vir r-tv L , , KAif )HS)W WE SELL Virgin. Olive Oil! ii 1 at 50 Cents per Pint GIBSON DRUG STORE "TheRexall Store" wytttt ENGRAVED CARDS AND XNVI " TATIONS. When yon want Engraved Cards, Invitations or Announcements - we will be pleased to send yon samples. Then is a dignity and influenei about work of this kind properly done, that is lacking where cheapness aloe e is considered, " v-fv, ; 3':i Our . work will properly represent your personality,' tha styles may be relied upon as correct and prices are very reasonable.' . THE TIMES PRINTERT, -Agents for ilareourt Co- Lonis ville, Ky. . . , . , J irtu1 mmrks mnA eniyiiirrtt o(tflitHd or no Fm mm naodd. v Acbm ar 4k4o um rripthMi for FRCK SEARCH mi nnor em pMWMMWuty. Hank nfareitrm WMTI BUILD rORTUNia 1W fan. Our Irm UKLlot tell how, what to krMft mm4mmjtmmimof. Writvtodar t D. SWIFT CO. PSTRNT UWVUI. auj ncvcnin wasningion, u. u.jb Visiting Cards handsomely ' printed ' -9 e . - . p. j ico vm. ooi ii, m ior '100 cards land plate, Block or EhadeS Old English, 12.40. , Othet 1 Styles of engraving up to $3.75 - Times-Tribune Office. ?," " tf. ' tngrared. ffniUnt Cards.' ehoiea of ten styles of Script, at $1.50 for .100 cards and pint.. . Block or Shaded Old English, fS.dO. Other Styles of engraving on t I3.7B. Timet-Tribuns effloa, -, tf. Tar. that ar lobulci with breath, tbrooga tb air passage t Ux htng. Tbaaa vapors ope tha air pa" sage, looaen tbcapslrgm, and heal Uij raw surface. 11 the cold is ia iL cheat, apply hot wet towels to opes ta fores. ka's i the abaorbed Uucnija. tb skin, taking out Uut tightness anj tore uoai, A litU Tick's applied np to nostril and over tb temple Is very beneficial for bead aoU and catarrh and will re Miev most eases of beadaob and ac ' ralfrta. -Vick'a Is also excellent fcr Asthma, Bay Fever, and Bronchial Troubles. Three ilaea, at all dealaro 25e, eoc, and 11X0. '1" FOB TIRED SORE, ACHING FEET Ah I what relief. No more tired feat; M more burning feet, swollen, bad smell ing, sweaty feet. No more pain ia corns callouses or bunions. - No matter what ails your feet or. wbat under: tb sun yonv tried without getting relief. just nse "TLZ." T1Z" drawn ont all the poi sonous exuda tions which puff np the feetj "TIZ" is mag ical; VTIZ" b grand; . "TIZ" will cure your foot troubles so : Suit never limp or draw np your faok pain.. Your shoe won't seem tight and your feet will never, never hurt or get aor. swollen or tired. Get a 5 cent box. at any drug or department store, and get relief. - V ! Evey's: TKe ;y Home of Good. Shoes lyyyya(yjK I : D S. O; IIOLUHD Oafennathl Ih v.li OWoa In Pythian building- nrr Rflrd's stora. Olfle houra S IS t 11 and 1 to i. Other hours bv appointment Con.nltatloD'tra. I'aaaa 6i. . ;. ZXmZ