Newspapers / Daily Concord Standard (Concord, … / Jan. 3, 1900, edition 1 / Page 2
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DA"L STANOAR JOHN D. EARRIEK and .SON, Editors and Proprietors! . ; OFFICE IX THE J1UBKIS KlIIl.l4 THE NECESSITY EMPHASIZED. 1HE STANDAKD is published every . . I IT I t 1 twy (sua fay excepted; ana aeuvtrea oy rces. itates ot BUDiscnpuon : -One year. . $4 00 Six momtia . . 2 00 Threw months............. 100 One month 35 fiinfJ' c uv 05 THE Y7EEKLY STANDARD is a our-page, eijjht-colunm paper. It has m larger circulation in Uabarrus man anj ether, paper, Friee $1.00 per annum in advance. Advertising Rates -TeruiH for regular adyertisements Euaue Known on application. Address all communications to , THE STANDARD, Concord, N..O. Co.NcotiD, X. C, Jan. 3, 1900. FAS1II0MIJLE BUT ORIGINAL Our progressive, next door neighbor, Concord, is nothing if not fashionable and up-to-date. Cut a pattern and Concord soon rigs up in the garment. Not content with a diversity bl inno vations such as it has . been re galing the publio with recently, it now has a genuine case' of smallpox on its hands. A tele phone message to T B Brown lite" Saturday afternoon convey ed this intelligence. To what lengths envy carries us! Salis bury Index. Yes, we are in the fashion, but our smallpox is but the last touch to our innovations. It came from nowhere but that of pure originality. It is something of an envious comfort that when wo wrait to be up-to-date we pro duce the material at home and don't have to take some, stuff second-hand from our neigh bors.l " : Senator Pritchard is booked to sp 1 k at Rockingham, .Rich-, mond county on the, 10th when he , 'will open the-, campaign against the ' amendments. He never feels constrained to divide time as there is .no one of his rank in the state arid " it would not be dignifying of him to do bO. ' ' ' " . The St. Louis young mail whp notified the clerk of court not to issue him a marriage license if ho should apply for it, because there was a girl who wanted; to inany him so bad that he; 'was afraid she would hypnotize him, showed great forethought, but the girl made a lucky escape. Morning Star. To accommodate , those , who are partial to the use of atomi zers in applying liquids into the nasal passages for catarrhal troubles, the proprietors prepare Ely's Liquid Cram Balm. Price including the spraying tube is 75 cen'es. Druggists or by mail. The liquid embodies the medici nal properties of the solid prep aration. Cream Balm is quickly absorbed by the membrane- and does not dry up the secretions, but changes them to a natural and healthy character. Ely Brothers, 56 Warren St.', N. Y. The 'cw Year m RIaze. Memphis, Tonn., .had a $100, 000 file early Monday morning as an opening up of 1900. The los was covered by insurance. Heads the List. Admiral Dewey heads the , list with fifty dollars toward a monu ment lor flag Lieut. Brumby. Froze Up. It i? winter again. Novigation fru: i Cincinnati to Pittsburg is close 1 on account of the ice. The Raleigh, papers giye ac counts of Nevr Year emancipation exercises by the Negro race there. The burden of the speech of the orator of the day there was against the constitutional amend ments. The speaker was not calculated to produce a good.; effect and shows the very spirit that empha sises the, necessity for the adop tion, of the constitutional amend ments. , ; , , . , He claims altogether too much for the Negro race at the time of emancipation and ascribes too lit tie to the tvhite race in the way of efforts to adjustthe two to the new relations. Admitting a 'few errors on the part of his own race he impugns the motives of the white race and practically charges that the amendments are bnt the initial step to the abrogation of the 13th, 14 and 15th amendments to the constitution of tne United States and the return of the Negro to slavery. He says that there is no middle ground between abso lute freedom and absolute alivery hisasseition implying the right to vote as an essential to absolute freedom. : He faces the white race with th e - necessary (. consequences of adopting the amendments that of general, Negro , exit and our state filled up, with; foreign ele-; merits worse by far. i. - ' ' 'I- - 'I ' ' "'I 4 , ' Now he does not boar. in mind that there has been no exit of the Negroes in the states where their voting is restricted and that the conditions are none the worse to say the least,,. v He forgets .if he ever knew that restricted or quali fied Yoting. f: is, hot confined to the Southern Statea.,, , - , , He 1. franticttllv 'appealed- to thS;, vhite' race' with iniustice to them in h!3 tones and the wildest perversion of historical facts and logical conclusions, amounting to little more than stirring up de spair and revenge in his own race. v -..-,. While we have such to lead the Negro race we repeat that the ne cessity for adopting the amendments- ia .emphasized, not as ? ft ' ' H 't ' i J v ; - matter of revenge or punishment but " for the - protection to Iboth ; ' ' f . races. ' 1 - , Train Held Up. r Last night a few- minutes to 7 o'clock while the Wilmington bound passenger train on the Yadkin pranch of the Atlantic Cost Line was nearing Atkinson, Engineer J. P. Monogan was startled by the sudden crashing of the headlight, and the extin guishment of the light. He put on breaks tand stopped the train to see what was the matter and found that a blue heron or crane had flown headlong into the headlight. The heavv srlass globe was broken to flinders, and the big bird was inside the headlight stark dead. Its neck had been broken in several places, every bone in its- body was broken and its wings as well The occurrence delayed the train fiJftepn minutes, the run from Atkinson being made with a lantern in the headlight, Mr. C. T. Pinkston, the well known mail agent, brought the heron to the city and last night showed it to the Star. It meas ured five feet from tip of tip of wings Well Worth the Price. . McClure's Magazine is running .a series of articles beginning with December, 1899, that will at the close of the year be a book entitled the "Life of the Master," that is, the life of Christ. It is written by the Rev. John "Wat sol. The December and Janu ary numbers indicate that the series, will be worth many. times ne price; or me magazine, wnicn costs oho dollar for, tne twelve monthly numbers. It is a good chance for a valuable work fox a very moderate price, beside the magazine will be found worth more than the price for other matter of interest. Not Incandescent but Arc Lights. The Salisbury Sun corrects The Standard in referring to the Salisbury electric lights as inqandescents and says they are the best arc lights in the state. The Sun says in its caption "Don't do it." Well we'll, be good and not do so any more. Wo hope the city has something better than the ordinary flicker ing, spitting,, 0 frying, buzzing concerns that are lights usually are. . tT Wilmington. Star of Sun day morning announces Jan. . 1st as the editor's birthday and. for bids flowers, calendars or cards; Then here's good wishes for many; more birth days for the brightest twinkler in the. state's editorial firmament. Wo wonder why Mr". Bernard didn't tell us the number of the birthday however. Having a Great Run On Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. , .. , Manage Martin, of the Pierson dru stor5, informs us that, ha" is hitying a srreat rxm, ' on r Chamberlaiu'a Coua:h Jlemedy. . Ie' sells five bottles . of t Ut medicine rt6 ofle of any bthe? ftirid, " and it grives great Batisfacjipn, In these day of la grippe there is nothing like Chamberlain's Cough ' Remedy to stop the, cough, heal up the sore . throat and lungs a ud give relief within' a -very short timei' The sales-are- growing, aud all who try it are pleased with ita prompt action.- Sduth Chicago Daily Calumet. For sale byM. L.' Marsh k Co. . I Koberts Must Wait, Chairman Taylor says , the Roberts case will not dome up in the House before about the 15th. It is to bq a . yery pa,refully .writ ten and exhaustive report by the comniittee'.' ' It' will "then ' be discussed- and Mr. vRoberts vwjll have, to abideby-the vote taken. M (EuBfr&iil: Boy. Wh.cn my son Gcorgfc was i 4, he was stricken with a ter rible netvotis affliction. Phy sicians nor medicines, helped him. H2 lost his speech, use of limhs and could hardly swal low food. Before he had fin ished a bottle of Dr. Miles' Nervine he could talk and eat xszli, s&d 5 bottles cured him. 3tvo. Jt-JJft O'Connor. WilUe, Tezna. 99 , e&hjes? ' is sold by all druggists on guarantee, first bottle benefits or money back. Book on heart and nerves ent free. . Or. Miles Medical Company, Elkhart, Intf We still have an assortment of EE JSLILTbiniir L03 suitable for presents: Very respectfully, D. J. Bostian. Poprietor of the Racket -Store. -. . ; - Labub, Bbntov Go. Ak;, Aug. 4. , I am 49 years old and hare beon suffering with Change of Lifo.i I iiad flooding- spells so bad that none thought I could live. My husband got me ,Wino of.Cardnl and It sared my life.", I am liks nothsr person since taking it. ' " . MRS. B. B. TOWNSEND. . It Is the devout wish 0 nearly all people to live to a ripe old ig e. None of us want to die young. This universal desire an be realized If care be taken of the health in early and middle life. A little precaution then will add many years to our existence. Death can be kept aw(ay a lone time. Happy, healthy old age will be the lot of the woman who promptly corrects the ailments which afflict her sex. In youth,' Wine of Garduiwla take the female child safely over the dividing luie between girlhood and womanhood. As a wife she needs it to help her through the trials ot pregnancy and childbirth with as little discomfort as possible.'-- At the Change of Life it will help her over the, dangerous place that appear In, her pathway between 40 and 50. Then will come many years of truly blissful existence. She will grow old slowly and gracefuHy. V To the last she will preserve that charm and beauty which are always, characteristic 01 periecuy neaitny grandmother It is for women alone to decide whether , they will be healthy 0 sick.' The remedy for their sick ness is close at hand. LADIES1 ADVISOSY DtPAfiTMimr. For advice In cases requiring special directions, adilretw, (riving symptoms, U4W AdrUurjr l)p't, Tta. CHATTANOOUA BEUICINS CO, ChattanooEn, Tann. LARCH BOTTLES OF WINE OF CARDUI SOLD FOR $1.00 BY DRUGGISTS. ? Mi CHOICE Vegetables will always find a ready market but only that farmer can raise them who has studied tiie-great secret how to ob tain both quality and Quantity by the judicious use . of .well balanced fertilizers. No fertil izer for Vegetables can produce a large yield unless it contains at least 8 Potash. Send for our books, which furnish full information. We send them free of charge. GERMAN KALI WORKS, uw-y, 1 93 Nassau St., New York. .t)uv .'lOO.OuO WANTED Tt pounds.of ; old cast -ron scrap, d iivpred at'Uv, foundry, at Vric'for which we will pay a fair p'rica. No b1iT7.it iron, w-ttntud.. J. : . , , "IGtf OoNgoKD Fodnohv . . 6O YEARS' EXPERIENCE j l Trade Marks Designs' Copyrights Ac Anyone sending a sketch and description insy Quickly ascertain our opinion free whether aa Invention Is probably patentable. Communlca tiohs strictly confidential. Handbook oh Patent ent free. Oldest aireney for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive tpecial notice, without charee. In the - Scieniific American. A handsomely lllnstrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific Journal,? Terms, f3 a vear: four months, U Sold by all newsdpalers. rs1UNN&Co.36,B. Hew York Branch otr 26 F St Washington, 11. .
Daily Concord Standard (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 3, 1900, edition 1
2
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