Newspapers / Daily Concord Standard (Concord, … / Sept. 10, 1895, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Daily Concord Standard (Concord, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
The Daily Standard BY JAMES P. COOK. OFFICE IN CASTOR BUILDING The Standard is published erery day (Sunday excepted) and delivers ed by carriers BATES OF SUBSCRIPTION One year. ... ... 1 ........... .84 00 Si:: -months 200 Three .months 100 Ono month..... 35 Single copy..i............. 05 i - ADVERTISING . RATES. fc. Ttrjas for regular advertisements nade unown on application. Address all communications to THE STANDARD. Concord. N. C. fiat there is success for theis more' ment towards manufacturing. . CONCORD, SEP C. 10, 1895. A Hapti3t preacher in Georgia re fuses to baptise converts except in .ranniQ1 water.- fauna an apple with a fuzz on it growing on a peach tree. The servants in school for.- girls in Connecticut, while cleaning up the rooms after the school closed, discovered 8678 wads of chewing gum stuck about in various places. A Texas preacher thrsw a Bible at a deacon who started to run away with the collection, and knocked him down the front steps of the church, breaking 7 his leg in two place. Our Cartoonist has returned from his vacation. There is much milk of-human kindness in him, when we observe that he has been thoughtful enough to bridle up this kicker. An Alabama father has taught all his children to read their books up side down. The mind ouht sometimes to be diyerted that it may return the bet ter to thinking. A Missiseipi river steamboat roustabout drinks a naif gallon of whiskey a day. A iuidn mother has an old slipper, still in use, which has spanked six generations of her family. A Pciinsylyania woman who chews tobacco and drinks whiskey thinks that women have all the rights they cited. She eriovs reading: "Over Sea and Land," the cornucopia ol lies on Southern people. Pickle inv Madison county, Ky., ho have paid their taxes are en titled' to be married free by the sheriff Oeigersyille, Ky is the birth place of a boy who was an inveterate tobacco chewer before he was a year old. Tbere is a man is Missouri whose feet are so large that he has to put bia trousers on oyer his head. There are ten thousand more men at work in the Birmingham districts of Albama today, than there were at 'this time last year, ana the calamity howler will find it a serious matter to convince these men that times are worse or that this prosperity is Petition?. To them it is a joyful xeality, hard work for hard money, and plenty of both. The furnaces and mines are running just as briskly over the country as they are an Alabama, and the only despair and depression apparent is that whieh exists among the croakers who crsak for 'political purposes only. An Indian calf, now two months old, has hoofs like a horse. ; . vrt- 11 hnnntv ft Tin ! N mountains iu jucltuhcu wuuij, - i will build a stulemeni there on the plan of OwtniGroTe, N. J., with tt. immense tabci uacle for meetings, & Cnlled Meetlnjf county AlHnc. Cabarrus County Alliance is calif d to meet at Rocky Ridge on Wednes day September 18th at 10 o'clock a. m., to consider the "Shie Factory" enterprise and attend to any other tuainesa that may "ome before it. J. L. Stafford, President, -: S. A. Grier, Secretary. UNTOLD MISERY from C. H. King, Water Valley, Miss., cured by Ayer's Sarsapatilla "For five years, I suffered untold misery from muscular rheumatism. I tried every known remedy, consulted the best physi cians, visited Hot Springs, Ark., three times, spending $1000 there, besides doctors' bills; but could obtain 'only temporary relief. 'My flesh, was wasted away so that I weighed only ninety-three pounds; my left arm and leg were drawn out of shape, the muscles An Illinois farmer owns a hen which lays twin eggs eyery day. An Idaho school teacher enforces obedience with a revolver . A Florida negro is growing fat on snake steaks. mmii'1!!! .hi : i til ra .- y r m ni'imnr.i''.. ... . n lite: One county in Pennsylvania has contributed two members to Con gress, two to the State Senate and two convrcts to the penitentury. FHOM THE NTATE Pit CSS. A South Carolina widow became her t)wn mother-in-law recently. Thet a to say, she is now the wife f her husband's father. re&igan has a man who is so fat 'that he can't fall down hard enough -to hart himself. He is known as the .human spheroid. TtHe Standard has received the first number of the Evening World of Salisbury. Mr. John M Jnltan is editor and proprietor; and Leroy Smith is local reporter. The ifirst number ia as f nil of local news and good meats as its space will ad mit The Standard wishes Heaven's blessings'on this World. The County Alliance is called to consider matters relative to the Shoe Factory. The Standard hopes There are over 100 freshmen at the State university. The bond of the sheriff of Mecks lenburg coonty is 110,000. Mrs. Bayard Grady fell into the Are. near Marion and was barned to death. Twelve counties have thus far sent in their abstracts of listed tax ables to State Auditor Furman. The State Board' of Public Chari ties inspected the Soldiers' Home and insane asylum and found both in excellent condition. The Carolina Central railway is to be extended by the Seaboard Air Line to Spaitanburg, SVC, from Ruther- fordton, ijs positively stated. Auditor furman refuses to issue warrants to cover the expenses of the last meeting of the Arrington committee, thoagh the latter de manded payment. Rev. Jas. A Weston's book,.uH:s torical Doubts as to the Execution of Marshal Ney," is in its second edition, and Mr. Weston haa begun icuwye uuuie reiurns irom nis work. There is a clash at Fayetteyille between the local board of directors of the Colored' Normal school and the State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Each has appointed .the faculty of the school. The plans for a cotton mill at Riverside, on the Catawba river, are abandoned, afer great quantities of material have been prepared, because a suitable foundation for the dam cannot be obtained. V C E Johnson of Raleigh accepts appointment as a committeeman to escort the New England Cotton Mill association on its tour through this State, en route to the Atlanta expo, sition. It will probably yisit several mills. The Christian Workers' asociuN tion, of New Haven, Conn.; has bought 5,000 acres of land in the ill . FN being twisted up in knots. I was unable to dress myself, except with assistance, ard could only hobble about by using a cane. had no appetite, and was fissured, by the doctors, that I could not live. The pains, at times, were so awful, that I could procure relief only by means of hypodermic injec tions of morphine. I had my limbs bandaged in clay, in sulphur, in poultices; but these gave only temporary relief. After trying everything, and suffering the most awiul tortures, I began to take Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Inside o! two months, I was able to walk without a cane. In three months, my limbs Jbegan to strengthen, and in the course of a year, I was cured. My weight has increased to 1G5 pounds, and I am now able to do my full day's work as a railroad blacksmith." IS, fM fhe Only World's Fair Sarsaparllla. ATEB'S i'JXXS cure Hcadaclie. MORRISON H. CALDWEL ATTORNEY AT LAW. CONCORD, N. C. Office in Morris building, opposite Court ETousft. , . : ADVERTISE RIGHT HERE ! .'-a TO i n TELESS fin n n n uiJ UILL mmm IS JUST AS COOD FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED. PRICE 50 etc. GALATIA.IIXS., Nor. 1J, 1893. GenUemen: We sold last year, 600 bottles of f u u o iji cuiUOD uxj.ii t j xkjixlkj ana nave vuuKui. uuw sruaa aireaay inis year, m ail onr ex- ntiver sold an trtlcJ? thavrvi such universal satia racUon'as yovir Tonic. Yours truly. k abney.Carb acq. For sale by all urusfgiBU. V THE . RACKET STORE - , - t. - -. - , . . , r Just Think of lt--We!Sa You iYAflr ' Bart Money on Every Purchase We have just closed out an importers samples of lace cur tains. They are oneshalf lengths. We have made three prices, 20, 30 and 40 cents. ' The wholesale prices ranged from $6.00 per pair down. This is an excellent chance to - supply your short windows, sash, curtains, &c. Two and one-half yard wide bleached sheeting only 20 cts per yard. Good feather ticking 121cts. 57 inch bleached table linen at 40 cts. Glazed Holland window shades mounted on self-acting spring top rollers only Hi cts. Extra wide chenille1 pors tiers, $3.25 per pair. Chenille table covers 68 and 98 cts. '::-r"::r Bleached ducking, 10 cts. Standard machine, thread fully guaranteed o. k. , 3cts per spool. Side combs 5cts. Shoe blacking let. Needles lc; pins lc. , Genuine French ing 4c. Twenty cent fast seamless hose two body and three threpd heel and to, only 10c. -Sewing machine oil 5c. Self pronouncing family Bi ble with King James and revised yersions of Old r and New Testaments arranged in parallel columns at $2.98. Ladies shirt' waist sets, 25c. ;ai ns in Every Department blacks black thread Come and for Yourself- the racket: D. J. BOSTIAN, PROP'R Nearly
Daily Concord Standard (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 10, 1895, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75