Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / Nov. 15, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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The " 'Concord Times, The most widely circulated paper ever published in Cabarrus, Richmond, Rowan, Montgomery, Davidson, Randolph, Stanly, Anson and Union Counties. STICK A PIN HEBE. U'ATE MODEKATE. r F CONGORD J Book and Job Printing Mr. M. Symona Baltimore, Md. Run Down That Tired Feeling Sever Headaches, No Appetite ix Eotttes of Hood's Sarsaparilla Bring Back New Life. C. I. Hat dai Co., Lowell, Mass.; "Iear Sir; Before using Rood's Sarsapa ri'. 1 was frequently sick and did not know v 'irfit was the matter wifb me. . One day I would lid so tired I could hardly stand, the next I uurl'Hiave a severe headache and So on, not kno'wius what the iext day would Jaring forth, 1 tlid nut have any appetite and r Was Craatly Bun Down I tried a good many nie;liciiies but they did me bo good. liavlug heard a great deal about Hood's Sarsaparilla I decided to try a bottle. I Hood'snCures am giad t SAT I soon felt better. I have now med six bottle and feel as well as ever. It has been of great benefit to rae as I have regained my appetite aud Now Enjoy Cood Health? I cau stroti'y recommend flood's Sarsaparilla Bs-an excellent frl'jot medicine." M. Svasoifs, irX Als-iuitii Street, Jteltmsore, Maryland. JOHN B. S HERRI LI, Editor. Volume Xn. There's a new, sweet face In heaven, and it glows with wondrous light, , As the beautlej of God's kingdom are opened to its sifti. i. -There's a lisping voice In heaven that with childish rapture rings. And I know thu angels listen when in joyooe- ness it sings. . . There's a pair of tender bine eyes that are opened big and wide. That yet are filled with memories of a home beyond the tide. There's a pair of tiny, dimpled stands held oat in tearful plea Asking him who rules heaven and earth to comfort you and me.- ; There's a sound of musical footsteps echoing through the street. There's a shout of happy multitude as they rush forth to meet The newborn angel baby that to heaven has found its way. That we have given back to God, with sad, ach ing hearts, today. Atlanta Constitution. 'BE TTJST -AJSTD ZFIE-A-IR 'aTOTj 7 .' ; " : T . ' ' ' , 1 : CONCORD, N. C, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 15. 1894. $1.00 a Year, in Advance. Number 20. OF ALL KINDS Executed in the Best Style at Lirnro pbices. . , ; Our Tob Printinrr witn verv neresanrw is prepared to turn out every va riety of Printing in first-class style. No botch. work turned out from this nflfW V T iivuuun. estabhshment. . BILL 1RPS LETTKIU Oh, my country, I thought that when me and my wife or my wife and I had raised our ten children and turned them loose we would have a rest and our re maining days should all be calm and serene.. But these grandchildren keep n the casing of each: door and had a did go to Tallulah falls about the close of the honeymoon. The honey moon is the first month after the , mar riage, and it closes about the time the young man quits calling his wife honey. We went in an old-tashioned carriage that swung high andjiad folding steps coming on and every new one that comes has to have a silver cup or a" sil , ver spoon or something by way of re membrance, y It used to be cups, but it i has got down to spoons how $nd I t reckon will get down to safety pins after Iwhiler My wife is a maternal ancestor and is proud of her 'grandchildren . and these little mementos have got to come, ! money or no money. And there are .the birthdays that keep on multiplying I and she knows every one and : wants Semitone. Ah, me, the BUbtle boundary between What pleases and what painsl The difference Between the vrord that thrills our every sense With joy, and one which hurts, although it mean No hurtl It is the things that are unseen,' Invisible not things of violence For which the mightiest are without defense. On kine most fair to see one may grow lean With hunger. Many a snowy bread is doled Which is far harder than the hardest stones. Tis but a narrow line divides the sones Where suns are warm from those where suns are cold. Twixt harmonies divine as chords can hold And tor tiiriug discords lie but semitones hieh dickey seat for the driver, and" a place behing for a little nig to stand on. Old Virgil was the carriage driver, and was proud of his vocation., .lie ; was then oyer fifty, and is living yet, as gray -as a rat and hlind as a bat. Yes we went to Tallulah when it was a how ling wilderness. Nobody lived there but a man by the name of Beaiy who was in the war with Mexico, and had named his two boys Churubusco and Montery and his little girl Buena Vista Hock's PiHsaot easily, jet promptly and efficiently, oa Uie liver and bowel. g. Mont Amoena SEMINARY, at Mt Pleasant, is destined to be ' FOB YOUNG- -:- LADIES IN THE SOUTH. .Seminary Elepily Famisliefl. An Able Faculty of Nine Teachers. 4. thoroughly reliable School is the am bition of the management. . itil & 'Cans Striata i Ad Iress. FISHER, '.principal. can. She has been telling , me lor a month that I ought to have a new suit of clothes, especially as there was a wed ding to come off in the family very soon and I would have to escort the bride adowh the long drawn aisle in the pres ence of a multitude? - And so I tried the clothing stores in Atlanta for a , suit with the tariff off, but I didn't find it. That kind hasent come yet, and so I shall brush up my old ones for the oc casion. V Nobody is going to look at me nohow, for there arp to be ten beautiful bridesmaids and as many groomsmen and a church full of witnesses and the Ea'.timcrS Sun. L-; ;a fA 1 ln.-l ol T Two Chicaeo physicians claim to have .A - f A f , ;t j u a St. Louis patient who has put himself missed. But i m buy my wife a Bilk wedding dress and she is as proud as IN LTLNG A CURABLE DISEASE? under their charge to be treated for ly ings He says that he has an uncon trolable mania for fabrication, and he regards himself as suffering from a dis ease which requires medical attention.. The two physicians are" represented as agreeing with him in the - opinion that he is the vjf tim of a disease and,- it is announced, wU eopn perform an opera- hon onutn .'for 'the purpose of curing his meolttibusness, The portion of . , A- 1 ' AJ m8 umS-mu t pretending to sew. She upon is nqiTOiea, out mat wouiuprou- . . -ivj, h0r ff ably be determined by the seventy of the .disease. An ordinary liar might pofe&ibjy be cured by simply cutting off his tongue, put the only way to cure the campaign liar would be to cut off his head. This method of -cure would largely diminish , the population and deprive political campaigns of much of their accustomed cW)F ana romance, but trut. which is so often crushed Jo earth under present conditions, would something for them. 'Just a litue Tallulah was then awfully magnetic, I something,", she whispers as she follows ; rect0n it is yet. I held on to my pretty me to the door. It is these little some- .young wife desperately when she ven things that keep me on a strain, but I'm tured a look over tb.e awfui precipice, going to keep on that line . as long as I j read a few years ago about a beauti ful nride losihg her consciousness right there, and in a swoon she fU over the brink and down, down, down, until she was gone from sight, and her husband became almost insane, and the people ran down there in horror, and despair and as they decended by the;-winding and dangerous way to find her mingled remains, they saw her hanging in a thornbush that grew from out the rocks a hundred feet down. She was alive, and they got ropes and rescued her, and found that she Was saved by the strength of a hopskirt that she bought at Dough erty s store, on Peachtree street, in At- anta, and it cost only fa. to, and he had plenty more of the ; same sort left. The carriage ride to the falls and from there to Toccoa and back home was a delightful episode, and I continued to call my bride honey and sugar and dar ling. It beat a railroad car, where ev ery envious fool is looking at you nd pointing you out, and these newspaper gimlets nre their Utile squibs at you and think it smart.! The wedding, the marriage, the nup tials is the biggest thing in a man's life, especially in ft woman's. It's bigger than being born or dying. We look bgck and wonder at the eagernesss with which we took the nsk, the peril of happiness or misery. The very word wedding means a bet, a wager, a chance. Nuptials means a veil, cover ing, as though a man couldn't what kincLof a wife he was getting; and con jugal means a yoke, and the law tells v-i theless the young folks make, the leap as though they would fall on a bed of roses, and all their friends, old and young, look on with smiles and con gratulations: there is no weeping or wailing. That comes later, if it comes at all. But marriage is nature, and nature is the safest guide of, all. she was at sweet sixteen, when she stood up by me with her Augusta clothes on. She dideht have but one bridesmaid, either, and there wasent much fuss made over it, l-here were, InQ presents at all, but a few days after we went to housekeeping seven likely darkies came tramping up to the house and sat down on the front steps until I came from the store. My pretty young wife was sitting had a mischievous smile 'on her fce, as I stopped in front of the smiling darkies. "What are you all doing here, said I. What have you come after,- Tip you and Mary , and all ?" And Tip said : "Old master sont up here to Miss Oc- tavy and she tole us to sot down here twell you conic, Old master tole us we all b'long to you and Miss Octavy now." Well, I never felt as helpless in my life. What to do with them I didn't C. L. T. " TASTELESS iS JUST AS COOD FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED. PRICE SOcts. G ALATIA, IIXS., N07. 13, 1S93. Paris Medicine Co., St. Lotus, Ho. Gi.'ntipcen: We sold laatyear, GOO bottles of GHOVE'3 TASTELESS CHILL TONIC and have buuuht three gross already this year. In all on ex penence of 14 years. In the drug business, have i r sold sn article that gave such universal sotis--acuou as your Tooic Sours truly, Abset, CA&b Si CO. For tale by J. P. Gibson. " North Carolina College, Ml;. Peasant, n: ov - J. D. SHIItEY, A. M., PRESIDENT. oadernic, Commercial, and Collegi at Courses. Opens September 4, 1894, u iers superior advantages to young uien, Iustrnetion thorougrh ' and prac tual. Good brick buildings, elegant Society Halls, beautiful and healthful loL-ation. no malaria, goad board, whole me discipline. Expense's per session. 100 to $145. . - Thousands cians canjeure lymg, even with the ex tended experience and special oppor tunities for study of the subject which their residence in that city has given them. It is too large a . job even for Chicago experts. But if they insist on attempting the cure of all . other kinds of liars, it is to be hoped that they will not deprive us of the campaign Bar, His cure is impossible except by blotting him out, and his removal would deprive us of the most picturesque and enliven i-ng figure in the political arena. He really4, hurts nobody, for nobody takes him seriouelvT and a campaign with out him would be as fclow as Philadeiph ia and as dry as Maine under Neal Dow. Touching Gratitude. Harper's Magszine. .-j . Y A wealthy man spent a summer in his native town, a quiet,, almost un heard-of little village in New England. His ancestors for nearly a century had been buried in the cemetery on the hill behind the town, and1 he improved his visit to enlarge the family lot, that room might be made for the final resting place of himself and his own family. He had made the town gifts of a small library and a drinking fountain, and hacf been,most generous in other ways, The evening before his departure for his departure for his city home he was waited upon by a large delegation of the most prominent citizens of the place. who came to make some acknowledge ment of his generosity. The spokes man of the party delivered himself of a long and highly eulogistic ; harangue, ending with these words: "And when as is your avowed intention, you come among us in the guise of a corpse, it will be our highest duty and our chief pleasure to see that your grave is kept green." ' . e. it. uiiiiora, lsew Uassei, VV is., was troubled with Neauralgia and Rheuma tism, his Stomach was disordered,' . his Liver was affected to an alarming de gree, appetite ieli .away, ana he was terribly reduced in flesh and strength. Three bottles jaf Electric Bitters cured him.. , Edward' Shepherd, Harrisburg, 111.', had a running sore on his leg of eight years' standing. Used thre- bottles of Electric Bitters and seven boxes of Bucklen'8 Arnica Salve, and his leg is sound and well. V Johfi Speaker, Cataw ba, O., had five large Fever sores on his leg, doctors said he was incurable. One bottle Electric Bitters and one box Buck- leu's Arnica Salve cured him entirely, ixAd by v. B. Fetzer, Drugist. Of Suffer untold miseries from a sense of deli cacy they cannot overcome. , BRADFIELD'S By sronsing to 1 . aesiiny action all her organs. Female Regulator, ACTS RS R SPECIFIC It causes health to bloom, and Joy to reign throughout the frame. It Never Fails to Cure. : : T ' ""' 'Mr wife has been under treatment of hmUiim physiciunfl tlireo years, without bene tu. After uinsr three liottlee of BradtieloVs I emale Keculator rhe can do ber own - Cookiug, milking and washlntf." , BKADFIELD BEGUUTOB CO., Atlanta, Ga. Sold by drnisU.at $1.00 per bottl. enjoy the novel experience of not being I know. I had no plantation and no ne- iumned on and mangled several thou- gro houses and, it never occurred to me - a i . t , , w 1 - .. sand times every day. Ana yet wnat I tnat t couia nire tnem out. do aiier dull, solemn, uninteresting affairs our consultation me ana my wile or my political contests would be without wife and 1 sent them all bacic except the andacious charm and flavor which J Tip and Mary and begged the old gen- the campaign liar gives to them! tleman to keep them until lat3r. tie tv VAlrata tlna fldinoirn iVitto!. J oninuwi tViA inlrA nnd Raid he nnlv TIC UKJ UUt ITCUCIC UiV f .7 I VMjyiyv. J a wanted to matte a u&uvery gi tnem, ior they bad long declared that when miss Octavy got married they were "gwine wid her. No, we didn't have our share of wed dings My wife cost me just $11.50 $ 10 to old Brother Patterson, the preacn- er, and a dollar and a ha'f . for the li cense. Cheap, I tell you. A good wife is the cheapest thins in the world,- for she has done been raised and clothed and schooled when you get her. Old Jacob had to work fourteen years for the eirl he loved, but he got some of that back by cheating old man Labon in the cattle trade. But nowadays the wedding costs as much as a funeral costs the old folks I mean. From the way things are gbina on at my house it looks like the whole family are to be married, even down to the little grand daughters, who are to be dressed up as cherubs rand mingle with the angels. It takes dry goods and lace amazing And the kinfojks are coming ana some dear friends, and all have to come in bridal array, and the cake baking busi ness has begun and old Aunt Ann is as much excited as if she wag to be mar ried, too, and declares that "nobody's cake aint gwine to beat" her cake. The house has been swept and garnished not a cobweb or a speck in-.it. The rooms in the cabin , have been cleaned and carpeted, and for a while one of them was assigned to me, but I am ruled out now and will have to hang up somewhere or sleep on the hay in the barn. It is a mighty big thing, I tell you, for our baby girl is going, to step off and leave us going off after a young man who is kin to her and never did anything for her but give her a ring and a book and some French candy now and then. . But it is all right and ac cording to nature and we can die more happily if the girls are happily married before we go. But our time will come yet if we life four years longer. We will have a golden wedding no silver in ours. We are for the gold standard now in advance. Just a gold dollar from each of our friends will do, for we are goldolaters now in anticipation. We don't want to break nobody. These silver wedding presents from the gener ous donors afe mighty nice and highly appreciated by the happy donees, but they give the old folks fits I mean the paternal ancestors who have to foot the bills. ' If an old man has a popular son or daughter who has to play bridesmaid or groomsman to somebody three or four times a year it's as aggravating as town taxes. : I know a handsome bach elor oyer in Rome who died insolvent, and it was making wedding presents that broke him. He wanted to marry to get out of the business, but couldn't make up his mind, and all his : set of girls married while he was making up his mind, and he had to give every one a beautiful present. At iast he died, and not one of those girls went s to the funeral. But it is the fashion nowa days to make wedding presents, and it is all right if they come willingly and don't strain the old man's pocket. is a sort of tax on income that has be endured.; In , our young-days we didn't get presents, but we had as fine a wedding supper as can be had now, and next day we .had an infair that was as fine as the supper. The infair was a swell dinner at the house of the groom's father, and both famines and all their kindred were there. That ended the show. There was no London or Paris or New York or Saratoga in it, but the young couple went to work. Me would marry every time.' I would rather have an uncongenial wife whose children loved me than no wife at all. It is the WQmen who takes the greatest risk, and she had better remain ''single than be bound to a bad man who will entail misery " upon herself, and her children, too. Bill Arp. She Guessed Not. It was 9 o'clock at night and the door bell of the v aine house had just rung. "There, Henry," said Mrs, Yaine, "1 lust know that that is the wagon with the new piano we bought to-day, and if it is, you just tell them they can't leave it to-night 1" "Why-not, I'd like to know ?" "Do you suppose, Henry Vaine, that we'.are going to buy a five hundred dol lar piano and then have it brought home away after dark when not a neighbor can see it brought in ? Well, I guess not !" Earning lc. There was no one at the table save the landlady and Mr. Skaggs, and Mr. S. was doing his level best trying to cut the piece of steak on his plate. "Mr. Skaggs' said the lady firmly, "when are you, ever going to pay your bill?" "Ma'am ?" responded Mr. Skaggs in a tone of surprise. "When are you going to pay your hoard bill?" ' - "I didn't know I had to," he said as he looked reproachfully at the steak. I thought I was working it out," and once more he resumed his labors. - ONE OF JOHN ALLEN'S JOKES, New York Herald. " - In the present campaign, said Amos Cummings in Tammany Hall the other night, Republican stump orators are pa rading the country ascribing the hard times to the repeal of the Sherman sil ver act. This, notwithstanding the fact tnat the most of their representa tives in congress had voted for repeal. It reminded him, he said, ' of one of John Allen's first cases' . -:V A distinguished Mississippi planter had been brought into court for biting off the ear of another distinguished planter, living next door, the sad event having taken place on the boundaryjine of the tiyo farms. Allen was - retained for defense:, ; Mistrusting Allen's abili ties, however, the defendant also re tained a young man who had just : re turned 1 having graduated from - the Harvard law school. ? ; An old darky,the sole witness of the fray, was put on the stand fop . defensi; With skillful cajolery .Allen drew frorn him the fact that the fight had taken place in a fieldrfull of newly cut stumps, that the stumps in many cases were snarp pointed, that the fight had been bitterly contested and that in the pro tracted scuffle; which extended over a considerable portion of the field, it would have been very easy for the com plaint to have fallen " upon one of the sharp stumps, and a portion of his ear in this manner have been cut- off. At this point Allen w$s about tQ excuse the witness, having made his point and noted its effect on the jury, when the Harvard graduate jumped up and said ; "Une moment, Mr. Jones. Are you perfectly satisfied in your own mind that it was in the manner you describe that the complaint met with his injury?" "Well, sah,"slowly replied the old man, "1 done tinks I would ha' been if I hadn't done seed de defendant af terward spit out of his mouf de portjQij of ear which de complainant lost." Cummings did not need to make the application. In His Language. There is a story one of the numer ous, un vouched lor narratives that float about the capital, of a rather amusing adyenture Mr. Garner had with a young man of Washington, who may be called Cholly not because nhat is his name, but because it sounds like him. The young man appeared to "be .having a rather dull time and the hostess was de termined that he should be entertained in some way She thought that the professor could relieve the ennui which had settled over the young man, and brought them to gether; . . "Now. Cholly, this is Prof . Garner. He has been to the wilds of Africa, you know. " Y-a-a-s. 1 ve heah d of the pw fessor. Happy to meet him, I m suah," "Of course you are,- He. has had no end of wonderful' adventures and -seen lots of queer people. And he knows how to talk to monkeys in their own language Now, professor, she went on, turning to Mr. Garner, "do talk to Cholly a little while, won't you ?" And then she fluttered away. SOUTHERN NEWS NOTES. A negro going through a field near Quincy, Fla., was pursued by a drove of ; cattle - and he made his escape by jumping into a well twenty feet deep. A lady was buried last week ten miles north of De Funiak Springs, Fla., at. the ripe old age of. 127 years. .The same settlement boasts of a gentleman w.ho is 112 years old. Two saw logs were received iii Palat- ka last week from the OckUvwaha river section, Fla, one measuring 4,500 feet and the other 7,076 feet, sixty inches in diameter and thirty-six feet in length. Yadkin. N. X has an infant with a well formed and matured jhead sitting straight upon its shoulders but with so snort a neck that its chin rests on the breast. Proceeding from' the back of this neck is another neck. I to which ia attached what the doctors call a bone less head as. large as the natural head. ikth heads have naftrral hair on them and the extra one has places for eyes and a piece of gristle where one ear ught-to be. """ , ;v - Pat Harden, - whose home is near Townsend's turpentine camDS. about fifteen miles west .of Starke. Fla,: left home Sunday afternoon and has . not been heard from. since. He was .last seen at the New river trestle on the. Georgia, Savannah and Florida railway, and was with Enoch and Henrv TTall an4 W. Otj: Hilton. Tjpon the failure of Hardin to return home-his wife be c&me suspicious and had Hilton and the Hall brothers arrested and placed in jail... . ;..- .;'. .. At Grand Rivers, Ky., a strange young girl was taken in by Mr. and Mrs. John H. Peck and on. Tuesdav October 16th, after a sickness' of several days, she died. There is a ; mystery about the girl.1 She gaje her. name as Carmep Lee Darmer, ' and told -two or three stories as to: where her home was. She said she was . persuaded to leave her nome by a young man and she traveled two days with him on the cars and theu he left her. Sheaid she had been wan dering about sincethat time, and that was some months ago. She waa of medium height,; was good looking, had mue eyes ana goiaen hair One of the most curious accidents on record happened a day ror two since -at Ashland, Kyy Charles Hannah got hold of some gunpowder and carelessly What He Had BlistL 4tI am - glad to be able to say, chil dreh," remarked the benignant ' old gentleman who was addressing the Wait's Mission Sunday School, "that I never swore an oath in my life, never drank a drop of any kind of in toxicating liquor. I never took a chew of tobacco; never had a cigar in my mout b; never smoked a pipe ; never went to a theater, and never saw the inside of a circus tent." - He stopped a monent to take breath and a boy in the front seat spoke up : "I guess you must a Come to .town on the last load. didn't ye ?" , How to Destroy Bedbugs; . Clean the paint Of the room thorough ly, and set in tne center of the room a dish containing four ounces of brim stone - Ligjnt it and close tne room as tight as possible, stopping the keyhole of the door with paper, to keep the fumes of the brimstone in ; the room. Let it remain for three or four hours then open the windows and air thoroughly The brimstone" will be found to haye al so bleached the paint if it was a yellow white, i k-- If any proof were needed that Secre tary Carlisle was dealing with the charge that Mr. Morton had imported an English coachman under contract, in violation of the alien contract labor law, it is furnished by his decision, that the man is a domestic servant in Mr. Mor ton's employ and consequently exempt from the provisions of the law.-. In or der to-arrive at that decision it. was necessary for Secretary Carlisle to re verse previous decisions madeby Sec retary Windom in 1890, -and v Assistant Secretary Spaulding in: 1891. Had he been -disposed to make partisan capital out of the case he might have ordered the coachman deported and cited the two Republican decisions mentioned as precedents for his action. ,. It is probable that Congress will be asked to amend that section of the alien contract labor law under which this charge was made, as Secretary Carlisle thinks the courts, and not the Secretary of the Treasury, should settle such disputed questions. "or Nervous Headache. A simple but often effective way of relieving nervous headache is -to bathe the head freely in water as hot as can be borne. This should be applied not alone to the temples, but to the back of th ears and the back of the neck, where the neryes are very numerous. The effect is, in most cases, ' soothing and beneficial.. - " K ') President Cleveland '.. has, ordered another extension of the civil service rules. This time ajl clerical employes receiving less: than $900-per annum, and all messengers and watchmen em ployed under the Government are put under the rules. Speaking of the mat ter, civil service Commissioner Proctor, who is naturally much pleased at the extension, said : "You may expect more of the, same ' sort. There are further extensions in contemplation that T4. 1 only await the arrangement of minor tn 1 details, : which will be perfected at ap w i 1 l iu:.. proacmng eumereiiuea ueiweeii imo Commission and the , heads of the several departments." Curious Facts. The tusks, of the largest ' Siberian mammoth ever dug up weighed 869 pounds. ". , - The cubical extent of water in the ocean is fourteen times that of the land above sea level. : . The largest tree in the world lies broken and petrified at the end of defile in northwestern Nevada. It said to be 666 feet long, A bat can absorb and digest in one night three times the weight of its own body. Bats never have more tnan two little ones at a time. Improve the Foot Spot. Fanner's Voice.., If there are poor spots on the farm improve tnem. uo not lei inem lie idle. Sow to grass ma plow under The farm on which we were born had ten acres of poor son. .Nothing was done with it until a few years since, when it was improved by sewing orchard grass" and turning it under.' It was then sown to wheat and another crop of Orchard grass turned under. In this wav and bv a free application of bam yard manure it was made a good field The soil was sandy. : ' ; , -Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report nr. n - e in - TABLE ETIQUETTE. Children should be taught to drink as little as possible" while eating. jruit is not to be bitten. It should be peeled and cut with a fruit kmie,. Never drum with the fingers the table or with the feet upon the floor, . Better is a dinner of herhs where love ;is, than a stalled ox and hatred therewith." ' ' - No gentleman will ever place his arms upon the table, either before, dur- ling or after a meal. , Meats are to be cut with a sino-le gliding movement of the knife, not by converting it into a saw. Keep the elbows alwavs close to the side, no matter how ample may be the room between, guests. v IN ever hurry the dinner: let every thing come along promptly on time, and move steady thereafter. ' toed oysters or clams are to be eaten with lemon juice dropped over never with salt and pepper. Be punctual to keep a dinner party waiting under any circumstances is the gravest social indecorum. : Take soup only from the side of the spoon unless wearing a mustache; never sip it with an audible sound. Nevej'play with knife and fork, or Other table utensils, do not touch ,them at all, except when about to use them. He uves longest and most safely who at dinner and elsewhere turns down his glasses and "tastes not the cup." If an accident of any kind should oc cur during the dinner, do not seem to notice at unless help may be quietly gjven, .. - - Jjisn is to be taken with a fork ; it should be carried to the mouth with the tines of the fork pointing down ward. - P80FESSI0AL CARDS, S. t. MOXTaasiEBV. It vxms wicir proiessionai, services tu the citizens of Conoord and vicinity. A calls promptly attended day or night. Ufflce and ' residence on . Eat - Depot street, opposite Presbyterian church. concord, n. c.i : Is preparedtodoallkinda of Dental ""orfc in the most approved manner. -t Office over Johnson's Druse Store. W. ' J. MONTOOMEBr. JT. LEE OHO WELL Attorneys aiii Counsellors'' at In CONCORD, N. C As partners, will practice lawin Cabar rns, Stanly and adjoining counties, in Uie Superior and Supreme Courts of tfce Stat and in the Federal Courts. Office on Depot Street Facts for Farmers, is the cattle Industry, placed it loose in the pocket of hi3 coat. it so nappened th,a.t were was a match uu a pwu-jmue in me same pocKet, and while he was walking along the street contentedly twirling, a cane the stick happened to strike the knife. which in turn struck the match and the match was ignited. What became- of the powder can be readily imagined. A arge portion oi nannan a coat was blown away and H took two or three of his friends to extinguish the firt. But the man was comparatively unhurt. There is a bank in Owensboro, Ky., which was without officers for a 6hort time recently.' It was a case of strike in which the strikers promptly won The cashier had been out of. town 'on t visit and in pis absence the directory cqnciuaeq w cut aown expenses oy re ducing the salaries of the cashier $200 and the bookkeeper f 100 and discharg mg an under clerk. When the cashier ireturned he struck and the bookkeeper struct -and tne under clerk was no longer m: The bank opened up with nobody behind the counters, but a hasty conference among the directors resulted in an immediate restoration of salaries and (he strikers went to work again. -V. ; ... - He, Too, Had Grieved. Indianapolis SeDtineL There lived down in Cambridge, Ind., a well-known old gentleman by the name of Josiah Nixon, who in early boyhood had acquired the habit of gross exaggeration, The habit had grown Upon him. o that he believed everything he' said was the truth, no matter how great the-exaggeration. After he had reached the npe old age of three-score and ten some of the deacons in , the church thought it was too much like lying to pass unnoticed, and it was de cided after agreat deal of consideration, that. the old gentleman must be churched.-' - ' " " :. ' : One evening while he was Beated in front of his door, telling a small circle of neighbors about the way the pioneer had to livej the gafe opened and the delegation filed in. "Yes," the old gentleman was say ing, "we had hard times then. I lived two years on grass and hickory bark on Sundays. We Used to call Sundays 'bark days' on that account, and that's the ' only way we eould tell when Sun day come. Bears ! I seen 1,200 great big varmints onc't around our camp, and I killed " ' "Uncle Josiah," broke in one of the deacons, "we have come to see you about this habit of yours. You have the unpleasant habit of forgetting the truth when talking, and we have come Great as is the cattle Industry, the valve of poultry and eggs produced in the United States annually is but little less. i- When the farmer is compelled to pay high prices for the foods brought on the farm for his dairy cows he should aim to produce high priced articles to sell. . .; . - Until oountry storekeepers grade the butter they buy and pay just what they can afford to for each separate lot oleomargarine will find . a place. American Farmer. 1 V When chickens are sent to market they should be sorted about as carefully as you would fruit-: Have only one si?, in a soop, and it is better if they are one color also. A uniform lot, of any product, brings the best price. Darmcrs lose more by the use of in ferior tools than may be supposed. . AiiT nour b aeiay eacn aay amounts to a month greater use of scrub imple- Dr. J. E. CARTLANU, Deafej, CONCORD. N. C. 7N - Makes a specialty of filling vonr tetli without pain. Gas, ether or chloroform used when desired. Fourteen years' ex penenoe. Office over Lippards fe Bar rier's store. D.G CALDWELL, M. D., Offers his professional services t the people of Concord and vicinity. Office in rear of bank., Night calls sLould be left at Mrs Dr. Henderson's. Office Hours, 7 to 8 a. m., 1 to 2, and 7 to 8 p.m. Sept. 20,'94.ly. JOHN THAMES, M. D. Oftets his professional services to the people of Concord and vicinity. Office St. Cloud hotel. Cal I s prom ptly attend ed day or night Night calls should be iett with clerk in hotel. Nov. 8,SH-ly. n ELECTRIC TELEPHONE J long length of time during a Scrub stock does not inflict damage than the ments.. The white snowberry is an exceed ingly pretty shrub in late fall. Large,1 marble-like, white berries are displayed, which last a long while, and which are much prettier than the small, white flowers which always precede them. Hay should be a paying crop on rich land. With a yieid of" two tons per acre it is one of the most profitable crops that can be grown, and leaves a large proportion of roots in the son to enrich it. If hay is selling at $20 per ton, the value of the sod on the' land, for turning under may safely be esti mated at $8 more. What Made the Trouble. - - "He done brought de trouble on his se'f " said Mr. Erastus Pinkley. "I treated him laik er gemman, I did, t'well he made remahk's 'bout mer Den I had ter damage 'is beauty." "What did he "He said dat voice. On'y.my say r I had er fine tenor mouf wus so big dat Sold outright, no rent, no royalty. Adapr. ienoe and beet Belle on earth. to Citr. Y ill use or Country. N home, shop, store and office. Greuteat a m every . tobvea- AicHti make from f5 to Ci50 perday. One in m residence means a sale to all the neighbors, fine intrtunent, no toys, work anywhere, any distance. Complete, ready for use when shipped. Can be pat up by any one, never out of order, uo repairing, a life time. Warranted. A moneymaker. Write W. P. Harrison it Co.. Clerk 10. Columbus. 0 MORGAN'S IMPROVED CHILL TONiC Superior to all Others. It is a true Chill Cure in combination with T,iver Tonics. When properly taken it never fails to cure the most obstinate case of Chills ' and Fever. Where others fail it will cure. It is pleasant to take, and contains nothing to injure the most delicate system, Babies take it easily. AS a Toaio it is without an equal. Guaranteed by your dmpffist. Price, SO cents per bottle. V0IGT & CO., Chattanooga, Tcna. For sale by D. P. Johnson and J. IMilbton HQ MORE EYE-GLASSES, de echoes got in an' spiled de chune.' Be HuEiai xietaical Forces! How They Control the Organs of the Body. How to Use Wheat for Feed The present high prices for feed stuffs and low price of wheat'make it desirable to know how to use wheat properly ior feed. The very best results have been obtained by mixing 25 per cent, wheats 25 per cent, corn, 10 per cent, barley and 40 per cent. oats. This should be ground together. Of course, this can be varied somewhat,, according to the supply, though care should be used that there is not too much wheat used. to remonstrate you", I know it, deacon, replied the old man, as ne looted around, "l Know it, and I want to tell you that I have erieved over that failin of mine 500,000 times a day for the past 200 years." Vaiter with tU Reports come from Ilendersonville, N. C, of the birth of one of. the most remarkable infants. ever heard of. It was born the early part of last week and its father is seventy and its mother sixty-nine years old. The parents ; are and prominent people of high standing and my wife that is to say, my wife and I the ages are well authenticated. He Knew. Pat was an Irishman who never would admit there was any any subject he did not know about. One day a gentleman said to him: - - "Well, Pat; do you know anything about the Wilson bill ?" "Oi do sor;" Oi know all about it.", "Well what do yo think about, it ?" "Well, Oi'll tell ye,'' said Pat, with an air of profound wisdom, ."Oi, think thot if thot man Wilson is anything av a gentleman, he'll pay thot bill."- : A Mother (at a party) Did you allow young Saphead to kiss you in the con servatory ? Daughter Why maw I Mother-Oh, you needn't "why , maw" me. One side of his nose is 'powdered and one side of yours isn't. ': A Household Treasure. D. W. Fuller, of Oanajoharie, N. Y, says that he always keeps Dr. King's New Discovery .in the house1 and his family has always found the very best results follow its use; that he would not be without it, if procurable. G. A. Dykeman, Druggist, Catskill, N. Y., says that Dr. King's New Discovery is undoubtedly the Jaest Cough remedy ; that he has tised it in his -family ior eight years, and it has never failed to do all that is claimed for it. Why not try a remedy so long (tried and tested. Trial bottles free at P. B. Fetzers; drug store. Regular size oOc. and l.uu. In 1833. when Andrew Jackson was President; his coachman, Charles, who had been with him in all his campaigns was talqen with confluent small pox, the most malignent type of the disease, There was a panic among the other ser vantsand "Old Hickory" tried in vain to get - some t one to nurse Charles. Finallv. ' he eave orders for no visitors to be admitted, ' changed his clothes, and nursed Charles himself, giving him all his medicine and attending to all his wants until he recovered. Things have changed here since those days. The electrical forca otthehatruin bpdy. nz tbe nerve fluid may ba term ed, U an espiv ciaUy attractive departmoi.t i rf-clence, nail exerts so marked on i-.:f! jo-!C nr.. the heallh of the oil-H ns of tno Uw.. . ; 1 -.Kr vo iort ) produced by tU brain tt id -.couvpyed l' nittt: n-s lT 1 HIT . t lu lira . ' . ....r. w the.hody. tiimsupiJiying iau vitnJitv mi. o! rv AO In sure their ii .aJt i. " 'i'iio pivcu.'nog ldi ric: i rrc. iu shown LurvJ, ma v dj said to ue the must iu:pjri.auu ot-i.haeu.ira nervo sys tem, a it supp-i'is the h.iit-; Lm-js. EtomaCQ. WuU .et-H ;wiiU tho nervj ror-o necessary to Ucan tLcra s'liva ana healtby. As wl;l l teea by iho eti; t,ite 1 corvo doscondiu.t t.o.u tho tin-M of ilia Lruia aua tur.a-aiit 'ns lu.f- e t; heart. ach taiitv becouies I any way dis ordered by irritability orexhauft-.on, the nersa forco xthv.a it suppUes is lessened, and tii or gans receiving tho di- is U i!.t i..i.-u:noSas; i .e. 3&&4Sr ,o i,ra-l.ei sup-.iy tnekklifl? ?.iu:,'a and &toB-fetfe.prgi?f with necessary vt KSiSr'f;5,3'SPh . Whan the brain , SSgSS -w 50 More Weak Eyes! MITCHELL'S EYE-SALVE A Certain Safe and Effectfe Remedy for SORE. WEAK and INFLAMED EYES. Produintr iAtng-Slghtednema, and Restoring tlie Sight of tlie old. Cnrea Tear Drons. Granulation, Stye Tumors, Red Eyes, Hatted Eye Lashes, AND PRODUCING- QUICK RELIEF AND PERMANENT CUBE. Also, equally efficaef ons when nsMt In ether maladies, aneti as ITIcera, Fever Bores, Tumors, Salt ' Rfaenm, Hit rns. Piles, or wherever lnltamrasiion exlata. MITCHELL'S SALVt may be used t Advantage. , ' SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AT 25 CENTS Administrate r's Wotice. Having qualified as the amini?trator of Miry Blackwelder dt-c-aboJ,- ajl persons OWIOZ Paid estate are lu-rely ,, notified that they ynnst make immediate, payment, oi suit will lie Im.ugat. Abd all. persons having claims a-aiut-t wud estaWmUKt present tfamn to the under signed, duly authenticated, on or before the 1st day of November, 1895, or this notice will he pleaded in fer recovery. A. A. ULiAiJJtv w luuj.iv, ; luimuibuuiui. By W. M, Smith, Attorney. Oct. 27, 1X94. talaisbed supply arecon- squentty- weaseneu. rU9.WUUS -... ... J . . . .1.. 1 ., nf ih a Innt, lull Treat LIIO organ itself instead of thecauseof the trouble Th noted sDecialist. Franklin Miles, M.u.i T T T ... .fmiii Ihft VMAtAP flUFt f)f II 13 11.0 to the study of this suoiect. and the principal uis.;o verles concerning it aredue to his ellorta. Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine, tbo unri valedraln and nerve food, is prepared on tna principle that aU nervous and raany other wlilicultles originate from disorders of the nerve Centers. Its wonderful eu. cess in curing tUese disorders Is testified to by tuouaaoda ia t very part ot tbaland; , Bestorative Nervine " cures Bleeplessnesa, bervous prostration, dizziness, hysteria, sex ual debility, Bt Vitus dance, epilepsy, etc. It lo f from oniates or daagerous drugs. It Is sold on a positive guarantee by all drag- nrice. II ser bottle, six bottles lor to, express prepaid Co., Elkhart, Ind., on Receipt of price, 1 FOB SAXiB BT- DR. ). P-GIBSON. Concord, N. C Eggs, Cliicieiis, fie, Wantei We want to buy your ejrgs. chicken n aud hams. Highest maikct price paid- tiring them on, SIMS & ALEX A NDEli, JIeh8 tf. ' Vmord,.N. C. Wheat and Oats; . I have a special preparitionor wheat ond oat. Nothing can be found supe rior to it. C. O. MONTGOMERY. : Sept. 13. 94. :. ; . : ..- ' , JfcVii-.. . ; " ; waht every man ani von-iaa.in the TJnitaii , ates interested in tbe Opruin and Whisity aabits to have one of tnv books on these dis eases. Address B. M. Woolley, Atlanta, da. BoxSS2,and oao wiU.be sent on free.
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 15, 1894, edition 1
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