(J tl I- . L ff - .'!': c i.i.SvScirt xJM circulated paper - i Oil L."r ; I ! M & till II A V?" M ST N. I X I V I r - . T ! 1 vf . I I V I M V . - I 1 1 i I - i r i V ft ; 7 -. I ; Ko it'.; Colleg- bc-in Cutint-, li0l lJ.- July. an, sen Stall. ; U .Randolph, Anson apld Counties". i :4DiiuATk ! Yolnme XHL ' : ; .HW.V & SUERRIU, Editor. hb ; ' yarsrr : and eie-is : not.' .f.,.,-;.:.-.-r ;,.;i,,,v:. , $1.00 a Tear, Vi Advance, jVKESlDEXT Taoarsox cnracir. AND THE IniU. ..Wilson Jiiii.-.'W-Viu'"' 1 !1 For Yea A BIG COTTON CHOP. COITCOBD, N. 0., THUBSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1895. I HISTORY OF COiNAGlE. ! Number 1U & BOOK AND JOB PRINTING 4 - J - - - - J 4 . - or all Knas -Executed in the Best Sty 1 AT UTISa KSICES. ' Our Job PrintinS Department! with eTery trecessary equipment is prepared to ttirn out every va riety of Printing in first-das style. No botch-work turned out from this office. We dupli cate the prices of anv legitimate establishment. - " - . TU succEssrri. tvokkixo or the SEW TABIFF BILt- Chaiiotte Obsencr. I Dr. Cyxu& Thompson, the new -presi-filcnt of the State Alliance, said in his sjccn at vary wee wionj aftrr being elected:. .. ' t When thie Church fully comprehends Ws mission Ithe men at the allter will crowd th Alliance. The Church stands to-ilay w.here it has always Etood, on the sid of hmnan slavery, and not on the. side ot liberty, I thank God that even thepu!pLti learning that we must live now as hereafter.; .This declaration brought no surprise to the Oeservek nothing that an AlliT anceman or Topulist might say could snrra-ise itJ Their chief ioy. is. in revil ing pvervthmsr. r The best men o - ar Estimated That it Will A moo lit to TIuu Nine Million Kales, More New Orleans, La., .Sept. 3. tntala of Rfirretarv Hester s annual re- nort cf the cotton crop of the United j States have been promulgated. They show recemts of cotton at all United, Commenting on Postma?ter-General Wilson's letter showing the successful The j operation of the new tariff bill, the New York orid says: . ! rosimaster-Generat Wilson's letter is one of those timely, complete and con vincing utterances which leave no more - u . . States ports for the year S.OOG, 177 bales, to be said. The retorm- oi tne lanu aainst 5,940,01)2 last year, ovenana wmcn ir. usuu uuulw . I 0S7.111, against 931,706 ; eouthetp maimed and crippled by corrupt dickers mnsnmrifionrf taken direct from inte- in the Senate with the mammon of uu- rv-f thpr rnttrn hplt. R07.973. asakist riehteousness, but in spite of these dick ihm rotton eroD of thftl ers it accomplished relief toj the manu- T7r4wi sttt &r 1R34-95 amount toj facture of the country in the freemgxj n. rvrtt r-t v t Tia sit last I imnArtint raw materials and relief ; to ;mr.n,l 6.700.S65 the year beiore. the people in : the cheapenmg of u n.o t-ss shnwn rfiver the larcest cron I portant necessaries of life A yeax s .i- m.- i iT,-;r,l t),at Af KTnonpncfl shnws uai me country ,ie iu. ;.j:7 ,t i;rn-l.i v4i iroi o tvvi is S65.-1 alreadv more prosperous because or 11, 19 j UCBUUVU l SIXTY-EIGHT YEARS' UNLIMITED USE . ' ' T OF BOTH METALS. J Severe lr:iia Derrionstrtte Merits. r catarrhal cbnfidoil is ofteii the lima tl'uin-hoea, and jwrhea' ;;t up and halid by by lIooTs Sarsa--it ;H-ted. Eead this ; 3 to tell what bene from. Hood's i Ssrsapa e-i witii clirqnic diar Fjalis in the Back and that this prosperity increase and multiply. "Where before our - manufacturers rPfttrirtMi to a 'home market, which tlnns toneTies and Dens. and if men, 1 872 bales. - irhr rtdt institntioTis? . . I ; Mr. Hester caa maae an idtous- ""J .- ., T 7 .. - I "This paper ha3 not heretolore maae j uon into the consumpuou oi cou.ua vy n. TUnL-w,. n , 1 rt- 1 1 ri a BrVnnS TO I rfvrvl Ari mi la trtjlt nTP HSfHl CUL4.U11 XUU CUU1U UUk vuuouiuv I Ul i'i . iUUUllrviij uu vuij " It I ' . . 1 , , j 4. ,1, be reminded of it now bv two news- the results show a total of S62.S33 bales, ga e tuu worK ana wag v ii svwjt- tatrn from out i inev are now auic 10 wuuuw. ports included in port receipts. This kets of the world. U Wngee are higher total shows -that the mills of the South and stiU increasing because of the re $144,000 more- than form. Manufacturers are more proa- during 1892-93. lie makes the actual perous by reason of it . It has given to ttnn rroi of Texas, includins Indian the,farmer a larger market for his pro- In brief it has restored a prcs- 793 more than last year, and states that parity destroyed by McKiUleyism and the actual production of the Indian securely promises a prosperity greater mDer articles about it, to hand yester- Hr. ' On of these, an editorial in the Atlanta Constitution. says several things, one of which is this: In these chaotic times, when the renins of Idiscord seems to be at work everywhere, there are men aspiring to leadership who are hardly fit to serve in tho mnt and file. Thompson is . a AGAINST SILVER. Highest of all in Leavening Power.-r- Latest US. Gov't Report free Silver Uai Not Been Successful In XUIslss' tlie Trice of tho WMt lletaS. Fall In the . Price ot Silver Aecoonted For foreign Money Iavb.. The proposition is to take off all lim it as to coinage ; to withdraw the gov ernment Eiipport of silver ; to Jet any man who haa silver bullion worth 50 cents have it stamped 100 cents. With out government support 4 12 grains of silver arid the new silver' dollar would be of the same exchangeable ralne.- The question, therefore, fis. What effect would free coinage have on silver bul- lion? Wonld 412i (grains oilver bo- ccme worth" as much i as 25. 8 grains oi gold? 7ould ibree coinage give it an ex changeable value equal to our; present dollar ih the markets of the world? It the valne of silver is not doubled by free t Cnlimited Coiiute Wonld Make America tlve DnmpiBg Ground.- - At the Iowa Republican convention, sj held at Des Moines on July 10, the Hon. Joseph B. Lone, temporary chairman, a made the fqUowing reference to the sil vpr rmftstion : . ' i ' Silver being necessary in the maneyf of the world, we must ! either maintain,', its coinage at par by legislative limita-f tion of the amount or change the coin-! age ratio of the basis ol its market val-i xte. - unaer inepoucy oiKgiuamo hum tation of the amount, aided by redem; tion when in excess of demand, we ha hem able to maintain at par our silve coin, althor-za its intrinsio value much less." This policy was satisfactory so long as the price cf j silver continued AC NO BBEAK 131 FTSION. - j The Republican and Populist State i Senators and the chairmen of the Eep- ublican and Populist Executive Cdm- mittees and "the Populist members j of the house of KepresentaUves in Oeve- j land county have issued a formal etite- PROFESSWliAL CARDS, e, msmm. ment. rwiblished in another colnme. ide- Mgh, but when it became reduced, onJ daring that iJia essential for the wel annannt of S overnroduetion and ether I a a L . lu a. 1 - causes, mere sprung up saemauu vy producers of silTer for special silver iegt islatian. This claim has now crystal lized into a demand for free and unlimr ited coinage of gold and silver at the ratio of 16 to 1. This means to give to Dr.I.C. Houston, Surpoa. Dnlist 1 CONCORD, N. C. coinage, thert the exchangeable value 0J.J to dep06it at tta mmts d th'e United aa'f"soin:tny. side. I wai B-aa advised by tf lends 1 - i sr-ataia. Icanufcencea ae la?t May; and h&jf bottles. X lotmq rental -:'-.fc'"jr?t bottle' and rw left lor veers." i w H.T.iftyr isn. West Virginia. j 4- e tie tt after-diEiil In, preTcEtccnstipaSica. .1- . , T - 1 -i .A i. .n I m HOI k r.fl ' case m pomu m legiuinaie wk lemiory was i.vf,oi ujuco. to build up the Alliance, bat he weak-1 His report on the crop of the ens his influence with the better clasaes lent States is diven as follows in of his order and of society in general I sands of bales : bv ex'ing out of his way to attaefc tneijsorth Carolina, churches. - lie aoesn i weaken uis wuucuw j, as we shall presently show. Fol lowing the above, the Constitution goes on: . v i ' ; ' : We domot belive that many Alliance men iii North Carolina will agree with differ-thou- South CaroHna, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, . Louisana, Arkansas, i Amffioa Pleasant, Tennessee, etc., Texas, Total crop, than any that the country has ever known. j Under such circumstances no- politi cal nartv can safely venture to disturb 45G the work already done. The only tariff 800 legislation now tolerable to a people jo 1,300 greatly benefitted by the removal of 1,000 taxes upon raw materials and the neo ' CO essaries of Ufe will be. such as enlarges 1,200 the free fist and. reduces or removes C00 other burdens. ; j .- - So0 " .'-The experience of enhanced wages, 5LV lartrpi. rrftdf. and sreater prosperity has V-r v O j - " ended tne taruf issue as a quesuon oe- logic . ot 3,L'7G their president, but if there are some who agree with Mm, they wiu see mat in the near future, when we are men aced on the one hand by socialism and anarchy, and on the other by ntrah zation ahd monopoly, the churches will be the the main stay of society and .the I ZMUVAUVU. V v 1 fJ.'uu9 . - I " - , - , - . It doesn't he in the mouth ot the At-jcrease m the spindles oi coutnern muis mue lanta Constitution to be tuggesOBg forces to combt socia'ism and anarchy, seeing A at it is doing more .thajr any other one influence in the South to foster these; but,.coming to the point left just awhile ago: the measure of supTOrt ithat ,1. Thompson's views : . T A, TTTTG I command, it is worthy of remark that lined to be .. nr.f .tci:t I T03, mi O.ooi fore the people. ith the The'crOD of OklahomaTerritory which facts confronting them and with their is included in Tennessee, etc. , amounted I own weuare as tut: uwmmaui. t i a sss ,!' - tion. the people of a relieved and pros Mr Hester's full report contains in- j perous country will give short shritt to terestins facts in relation to tne in- any pouucai jmuij "'Ti ppindles of Southern muls make 4mad protection' iw smDDoieui. tcVpY mil wimft into hev nave learnea in uie t:uwi WIU IU 111,11 .uui " .. . I - . ,, ,, j tt-:i. tne truin mas .air. lioou operation during the commercial year. t ... ..... i:i. lie will state tnat wiin . anyimng un.c fair trade the SputK" will require 1,000, 000 bales to feed her spindles during 1S95-'1X. In reference to the overland, -Mr. l. iJiJ-i o SOUTH .t,-ni iaijlij.-; jL'ltipuiJitjd I7, penence teaches, 'that there is no way to protect American industry except by relieving it from burdens upon the materials which it works; no way to secure good wasres and steady employment to home lalmr . excent bv freeing I it from the' shackles which have confined it to An Abie f aculty ,1 Ah r , . .... : .- 1 j ', Ia riSHEIl. Pripcqpai fiF&lMi'Coilefe If' t 1 1 .a ..i . u j Ei. J. D. SE1REY, - i - hf i , Ai :k1o:u:c. Coftimeicial : ana I ' 1 Courses. ' ; -i- f iT-iul rf.? a-lrv o .-; f-, 00 to .137 rts. Hester includes two roads, which form- L - i!:.!. i:'. (t.,n- unt i . v:u v,.,,!!! I cinttwl home market ana prevented it iremnnstrated with nor chided nver S0.SO0 bales. He makes the aver- from seeking its customers all over the l.wftrW That wculd indeed be mad given him a fiat-footed endorsements bale more than last season and, says protection' which should not propose Wequote trom a iwo-coiuum tuiuiuujmai it equais ivr,oo,ow uaira m w '"y 1 iq the Hickory Mercury of this week: growth of 1S92, when the otal was It wai our privilege to be - at v;ary. 1 9,035,000 showing that tne soutn na We beard Dr. Thompson give expres-1 actually produced, this season, j.,w,uyu sion tolhe above. W'e admit .that at! bales more than the largest crpp preyi- first it did sound rather narsn. e i ouslv on record. I '&-'' - 1-rJ .i; IthoughifliatperhaT.8 he bug-lit nt to Inspired. Kisses for the Church. ' i Madison Advertiser. I At an entertainment given for benefit of me Methodist church Moultrie, sGa., a fw nights ago, Inilirfii nf ihn tntrn, i -. - mr Tiftvtf silver dollar must drop to the actual Maine of the silver put into it ; We would not have bimetallism, but a gold ' dollar worth twice as much as the silver dollar, and the silver dollar would become the standard measure of value, driving the gold dollar out of cir culation. We would reduce our stand ard one-halt - .- ' ! -."... -. - When the act of 1 792 was passed, Jef ferson and Hamilton both determined to make the new gold and silver dollar equal in Value to the then standard cf measurement, which was a dollar equal to 24 grains of gold. They recognized the fact that the exchangeable value of a coined dollar must be controlled by the commercial value of the bullion put upon it- Therefore they undertook to find how many grains oi silver unearned . n , :l 1 Am. were commercially , equal ln vaiuo w 24?4 grains of gold They decided that it required 15 times as many and mul tiplying 24?. by 15 placed 371 grains of silver m a dollar. ... Thi4 undervalued gold For the first few years, owing largely to the lack oi quick j international communication, is circulated to a limited extent, and then long before 1834, went entirely out f circulation, and" we were on! the silver standard' In 1S34 Jackson sought to re store bimetallism, but he was unwilling to change the standard upon which busi ness was then . being done, j He recog nized the danger to commerce of chang ing the standard. ' He therefore reduced the amount 'of gold put into the dollar, so thai under the new coinage the bul lion value of both dollars would be just equal to the dollar then in use, and at his instance a new ratio of i to 1 was passed. It was soon found that this new ratio undervalued silver, and shortly after 1834 this country went to the gold 1 standard of 25.8 grains of gold to the dol- t mii mi .i hi i ii iii in ii 1 1 ii 'i i in ii ii ii I it the of the to demand and receive in return, free 6f charge or cost, that silver coined into money at the ratio of 16 to 1, bearing the stamp of our government l( In my judgment such a policy will make Ameriea the dumping ground of silver for the world. It means we would be hronght at once to;a silver basis. It means the detrradation of our dollar to 50 cents. It means repudiation. It will bring an avalanche of 'silver, but a rest for labor. The Republjcans of Iowa op pose this. In the state of -Iowa if ire owe a debt, we expect to pay it in money worth 100 cents on the dollar, in money of equal purchasing'- power with -any other money of the world If any one owes us. we demand and expect payv ment in money of equal value. ; This is a vital question to all Classes. The farm er, the laborer, the merchant, the man ufacturer, all classes have an interest .in the mamtenancepf good currency. Tie dollar they receive for their productions and labor should haye the highest ptn-r chasing power and be as good "as the best purchasing dollar in the world. Upon a sound currency depends to a large ex tent the development, the prosperity, the success! and the maintenance of qnr people. DEMANDS OF SILVERITES. rayed themselves in their; best costumes! exception of the time incident to the t . . , . , .1. . X A-.-- -d 1 , " I Eloquence is speaking out out oi and sold kisses to tne ooya xur w "the church 1, a nice surr havesaidit But moment s rehecuon Jil r.J V.t Via rliil rio-Vit. For iv. v.,0 nm. m.-v,W th tmth mnst 1 1 aKnndance of the heart, the only I apiece. "As a natural u t-.ii fif ;t Kr rV.rvTrt it miiT. 1 annrm fmm which truth can flow in a I .ays the Albany Herald ucki..."-". j , r .ii-nn.:. sj;.,' pponle who live in the clouds do noi i passionate, persuasive torreuu x i aeDi nae uccu 1 . .... . i I . T . " T I Z Z v war. - Under the new ratio, after 1834, even fractional currency was worth more when melted than its coinage vaiue, realize ithe import of such.things as this remark of Julius Hare is illustrated by plU3 left and the young men otiouitne ,16 in 1853 it became neces S'eeeh of Dr. ; Thompson's and this a story told of the eloquent iMethodist are bankrupt' This new and pracal gary to provide a fractional currency, of iL Thev hihon. the late Doctor Simpsbn t" I osculatory exercise may be ad right, bat 2 a reduced number of grains Lit n lmj. iss-t. v"vivi- i trr - i - . . ; . , ..f I yah Cblleglate eipenses for Eesfion -to. I -, i . rue.-insSept. 3, 1895. 3Tor ?eeial inf ormauon aa- elent as abciye, or j ECEETABT OF S. ACUX-ET. ;:th CAEOlisA S - , ,v i m - d Ml i ii-jxf sgion oi tima Qiies&i ;lluiLlijii will tmj-er -ou. faiinimuup . s f rst Siiardav in August. m a. t cbrucal eanca- n Ii snail v ov COSt Wia do .jvriv tor catalogue. ! j H0LLJ1)AY, Pres.! .j lltigh, N-C. X 1 : 1 J are full of significance. A. few yearst Bishop Simpson preacneu iwuie j""0 an they would have horrified the staid j ago m the Memorial man, lionoon. , . .i . at E,i 1 t v.tf on V.n.r Ha notr nnietlv. with- Pn?-?iTt' I pWpiC VI -lull" vi.i" ' - " i i " . - v FfsSiUiliL I ean,;7r,pnta .hock nobodv and find ready but gesticulation or uphfUng of his ractnrinff the Son jf God rder of which. Dr. Thompson is the bearing our sins in His own body on -V,ioh i tVi;baia of ant th tree, he stooped, as if laden with an Licnvt- m vi tt i I r A ' , - m influential political party in the State immeasuable burden, and raising tobis x- rr Thnmnsnn'a nUerance I fnll height, he seemed to throw it from . j - x : . l j ' hrine-s no surprise, nor does the open j him, crying : . , a it rattfT rf Vila or- I "TTnw far? As far as the east is dJUOiacLucni. ii I l" I . , TT der But it is amazing that . there l from Uie west, so lar nam xi mu. .i 1.1 w VrK Carolina Democrats I nrir rransoTessions f rom US. . luuuiu . i " .. , , i z : . oil ihAirl Tk. ichnk aEumNr ns II muveu uv - v . . - t mn. ,,n- I ;mc;KiA imnninA msft. remained i will h worth somethmz uke o a smacjc mignt to me tpiniui - --r - ,:. tho niH mnid tianiiiiiir far a Ktwinrin fir inui uicu sous. ri(i su un uu iii bc back into their seats. V class is reached. Those in this class A professor of elocution, was there. A will have to hustle for themselves, that s fnAnrf nrVio aimmtm! him. - and ' knew I alL that he had comedo criticisei" asked him. when the service was over, W ell, what tJn von think of the Bishop's elocu- j - -- - tion?" i . "Rlncution ?" said he; "that man Irioon't want elocution: he's eot the WV- - I v Holy Ghost!" it must strike r the average reaaer mai i th Moultrieiirls have made a big mis take. A kiss that isn't worth five times as much as a pound of cotton isn t worm hsvino-. Ten cents is a regular bargain r,intr rrice and Bhould never nave J ; , j been set. '. j : ! . ' This kind of caper for the relief of f a church debt may spread. It may be- mmfl a fad. and if it does and strikes Madison, the' young ladies of Moultrie j -ni shmrn a thins- or two. In the first r.lacft the "kissables" will be classi- lied iust as cotton is. Sixteen-year oias rts. ances las these are born. :(--;.: ! the L.v.v , r i C. t-.r '. - t.i " tfvFOPJ), N. C. m .begins Septembe eccive careful training, in. . 4 i f-ral and.rhyeicah. r ufc oa applieation. j . , ! j I ILITABY SCHOOL, i. . ... isrd or Horth Car olisa Wrinkle. - Ram's Horn. Worry is the grave digger on well to gether. ' When we go out to jueet irouDie we never have a Jons walk. When the devu can't get behind me preacher in any other way, he some times joins the choir. , Anvbody can be pleasant te pieasant . . . . . . j i i . people, but it taKies grace to ue paui to unpleasant people. . If you want to get in a crcoitea paut inst follow the direction of the cork-screw. There are people wno naie a uu, who borrow books and never return them The Trials of a Country Editorl Harpers Magaxine, Eecentrlcity ta Wilis. The makinff of one's will is hardly to to be ranked among the pleasant duties of life, yet there are many documents of this character which are, in tenuonai- iv or unconsciously, humorous enough. A -story is told pi a uying miser, vy whose bedside sat the lawer receiving iistmctions for the preparation ot ms last will and testament. "I give and be. to the dollar, and their, legal tender was limited to $5. The Spanish milled dol lar iwas still in circulation, but the highe&t amount of foreign silver by the estimates of the treasury department in circnlation'at any time was $50,000,000. tn i rro thft 1 crold circulation was 1214000,000 and subsidiary silver $21,000,000. While 4,000,000 silver dol lars had been coined they have all gone out cf circulation,. being; worth more when melted as bar silver man ineir face valne. ! Thfe facts prove that free and unlim ited coinage of both metals by the Unit ed States did not substantially affect the bullion value of either metal; that the cheaper metal became the standard of value, and the other went out of cir culation. ! '- If 6S years of experience with tree and unlimited coinage of both metals showed "that by free and unlimited coin age we were unable -to affect, first, the value of silver to make it equal to gold at the ratio of 15 to 1, or, second, tne value of gold, to make it qual to 6ilver at. id to 1. when the difference in their bullion value was only 5 j per cent, is it They Ask More For SDrer Than Has Ever Been Granted' to Gold. ij " One of the claims made by the advo cates of silver is that the government should treat both ; metals alike. How does the government treat gold? For every 23.2 grains of pure bullion jde posited in the mintf the owner receives a gold dollar weighing grains ana nine-tenths fine. The government stamp adds nothing to the, value of the meitaL It simply certifies to that value ana nuts the metal in a form convenient Tor WW5 XZ Til VUU TT WM fe-" S" coined is worth $1. It you go to pu- rope, the little piece of gold is wgrtn 1. If your house burns down, the lfttle flump of gold that iwas worth $1 pre vious to the fire will be worth $1 at itaiy jeweler's anywherei ; J f The advocates- ofi free silver dolnot Ti-Tt ciVirasT frAsted1 this wav. Oh-'inol TViAxr nslr for moreJ Thev ask thai owner of silver bullion be permi take it to the mint and have the go ment stamp grains, wim npcesaarv alloy, as a dollar 01 ei legal tender with the gold dollar vhen today the value of the bullion in the dollar is worth only 53 cents. They, ask fr,af ri mrvnmmfint stamp, its fiat, to the extent of 47 cents, shall be p every 53 cents worth of silver they to the mint Say the nouse Durna 1 The niece of silver worth $1 the before because of the stamp only is worth 63 cents when taken to the eler. :- I Don't vou see that the silver art, askinir more from the government for silver than was ever granted bjf any government in the world for gold?1 One metal stamped $1 because of its sralue the world over ; the other stamped $1, and worth but 53 cents anywhere. If we are to have fiat money, why not have it all fiat, and not 47 cents nair offer their professional services lv the citizens of Concord and vicinity. AU calls promptly attended day or night Afl? i T - -, . , tt. mace ana resilience on xjisz xcpot street, opposite Teabvten&n church. of thr laws-passed by me LegisiaTOre that we have a continuation of co-op-. eration between the Kepublicahs 'and Populists next year m orth Carolina. " They declare further that the liepubh cans are entitled to the Governor and that Judge Bussell, of Wilmington, ousht to be the fusion nominee. f This is no chance endorsement It comes from prominent Republicans iind Populist who are in close touch with the leaders. A short time ago, JUr. ror- tnne visited Judffe Kussell in Wilmina- ton. It is probable that he was tbere when Butler and Skinner were there to confer with Eussell and other Kepubh cansJ At any rate, nobody who knows inpm wiu oeueve mat x uriuu Hamrick have issued this manifesto without consultation with their leaders. It is the beginning of the cut and dried programme to nominate Russell, aj bit ter and maliganj old-time Republican, for Governor, and the official announce- ent that fusion will continue m lbU6. While all this is going on in Cleve land county, Butler is trying to convey the impression among Democrats jwitn whom be talks that his party is anlious to join forces with the Democrats,! tell ing them that the Republicans; are mostly gold bugs, and he prefers Dcm ocratie co-operation. If Butler was in earnest in his criticism of Republicans for their advocacacy of gold, andj had any: devotion" to principle, he would never have fused with them last year, or be would, now that he has received his price, "openly renounce all cohneo tion with them in the future. Fusion will continue untill the ppople rise superior to the politicians,! and smash it in a thousand pieces. ... They can be depended upon to do this sooner or later. The fellows who have"put money in their purse", by endorsing fusion, will never agree to drop ' it jantili the masses drop them. j Tte seovr3f aTel 111" laif ; - Mr, ($. Cailouette, Druggist Reivers- TUie, ail,, . -L . I ntrn hi TtesKiOTml RPrvicnS to thfl Is prepared to do all kinds of Denta work in the most approved manner. Umce over Johnson s Drus btore. I W. J. MONTOOitEET. J. UCBCB0WEX1 Attorneys aid Coesellors at Law CONCORD, IT. 0' As naitners. will practice law in Cabar- rus, Stanly and adjoining counties, the Superior and supreme Courts of the State and in the Federal Courts. OfiTce 1 on Depot Street MORRISOH H: CALDWELL. Attorney at Lew, CONCORD, N. C. Office in Morris buflding, opposite courthouse. -;.':r July 4 tf Dr. J. LCARTLAM. Eesk CONCORD, N. C. sivi. Makes a specialty of filling your teeth without pain. Gas, ether or chloroform ; used when desired. Fourteen years" ex perience. jOffice over Lipparda .fe Bar rier's store..-. ;. ; V; ..' . D. G. CALDWELL, M. D,, Discovery I owe mvOife. Was with La Grippe and tried all. the phy si- eians fol miles about but of no n.1n 'WftU tiltu till -vaiia fcuia I iiuuift Uve. 13S Ktore I sent for a bottle and began itl use and from the first dose be in to s-et better, and after using f three KottlAs was no and about ajain. It , ia worth its weight m gold. We won't people of Concord and vicinity. Oflice in rear of bank. Night calls should be jnnirnnn a J to 8 p. m. leler Sept 20.'94.-ly. a t a..m... 1 u- , ihone call, No. 07. Wthe ttefl to T- virn- ifaai keep store or house without it free trial at Fetzer's Drag Store Frank tesUe's Vopxdap Monthly . tember. DR. ft HOLDEN. Get a I ECLECTIC PHYSICIAN, fiOXCOED, K. C, Offers bis piofes8Sonal services to tfce fi7Tin of floncord. and vicinitv in the Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly for treatment of acute and chrome diseases. UluCCUYCi luiMOni.i wvi w street, where he can be found at all hours day or night, when not profes sionally engaged. Feb. 21. 3m. Far Sep- i at on flight bnlv Hew- piopie September is out in a. new dress of type, which, with the artistic cover and the broad, handsome pages, gives tM finest possible setting to its numerous pictorial nnri lterarv leatures. inese latter are always of a timely and -Reasonable ;na ture, and in the current number in clude: a fascinating paper upon! "Mis haps nnd Mysteries of the Sea." by Mary Titcomb, reviewing the world's great marine disasters, ana supcruij illustrated with drawings by Overend, Davidson, Schell, Burns andMontbard; the idyllic diary of "A Quiet Summer on Lake Maggiore," by Lena L. Pepper; "A Holiday Trip in-Search bf Old rhina" bvMrs M. E Leicester iAd3is; a charming sketch of outdoor festivity in the south, entitled "Al Fresco,' 7 Martha McCulloch-Williams; an inti mate study of "The Factory lowns 01 are a source of comfort. They 1 are-a source of care, .also. I If you care for your thild's ( health, send for. illustrated . book on the disorders to which children are subject, and J which , Frey's . Vermifuge I thas cured for 50 years. I V l - Om boUl bj,MU Ibc a oealt 1 V m ' s. FRET, ' I - fv s . -. Baltimore, Bid. have it all nat, ana not; i XUiif "T'', . ' ,i nUnt if we are to haVe fiat money, let fo, be England," by wardPotriU; A Chat Whatever may be the truth or the queatb," repeated the, attorney aloud, falsity of the stories that are told of the as he commenced to write the accustom scarcitvof funds in a country editor's ed formula. t!"No no,f mterupted the Ol ioou in u,isi EicK. man, -ItLe Universitv. the Cdllegi Medical bchools, ot1 toe ol for Teachers. Tfaition hrrs.Tl stadents. Apdress 1NSTON, Chattel Hill, 1?ne and handbook o Kducation." -:- 4 ;- &TS WW ill . ShoulcLTJse FEiiALB TTT IT IS SUPtrXB I0m and ouderful influence in her system by rough the prbperS chan- liiUDuritids. Hf.alrfl and strenfelitfe ouaranteefl tofitsult crivii iimg AU About Block Signals. Block Signals on the 2sew..xork Central," the latest addition to, and nnmher 17 of the popular "J: our-iracK SonM " of f America's Greatest Rail- roarl " is Irom me press oi tne aiuw iaan; Bank Note Company; contains km tkxtSs Tiarrew octavo, beautifully. print ed cin coated paper and illustrated with its app railroad celebratedrEnglish expert on Block Sig nals, and the subject is treated in a way thsti can not fail to interest the average .oior a a well as the techmcal en- W V. i I . .... t t . I -1 ' it.. Vk.a thd pineer. it la oeueveu iuu mw, . "v utot-nf railway safety devices, has net- er before been so thoroughly and com in ti( Tier Cent? It cannot be claimed that the legisla- i" t C4.4-a.-i ,n lOQ CO-PI- . . i tinn rxr t n i uu i i. tiLatts i is a w w and neither the progress of education "yy eu, men, , auggu ected the commercial value of nor the growth and development oi the law, "suppose we say i?nu. x f that thxxQ we have fur- ctod One of the latest comes from Jter," assented the unwilling testator. voA tn rr. Johnson Kentucky,' where tne mountain v ueu uui. u-ioj - - . iir,T0winto a.fhrasus orlhis Tiictures.- china. i rare books and a,,, tia nrticnncerninff a! fnrriitnre. the sase exclaimed; . An, an iuu,, .rri-SiCL uj rT .Tu tWiT,, that mate a mountain editor. .A suDsenuer uu ixaviu uicwjuo mTTiVvfired him very kindly, and a day I death-bed terrible paper. But the silver people clain that from Havannah.'With some; timely Mt government passes afree cdinage pictures, by Anna Cronbjelm Wallburg; wii -will .immediate- "The Romance, of Early California, bullion value was only & i Peroenc, u - H taa now being Worth by J. M. Scandland; "The Story of t not preposterous to claim that free and ly jump in price gcannow ingj slmover," Jpy W. j! Harwood;' and t&.A1 coinaee now will so increase 53 cents for 871 X grains to 1 "H- 'TT.Tri H,.l.t.PW,f! the value ot silver when the discrepancy YIRGIHIA COLLEGE, FOR I0DHG LADIES, Eoanoae, a. '.- I TVU'Kf I ( II lur OUtiVLIT V " ' 1 . F , . . . . . , . . - r .1. 1 i i . - . . . .. i i t - w i . vhn i hnntirnr ior a wue witnuuki. . ii.- nircara toiri. innooth mvtn n. x uau no. uv.. i ... l . 1 . I OWUllW") . I J . a fault Bhouia rememner mat .ixv pwu heisiseeking may be searching for husband of the same sort. The man who is only concerned to V th ATact rrnth is not apt to be farmloua. . ' ... It 13 as well to take warning from the silly as counsel from the wise. Ik. cnuiimnimt TV, VOU be 116 V 6 it? Some people are almost wilhng to Huxley, accompanied with an believe that the moon is made of, green cheese. Humboldt (Tenn. ) Messenger. Opens September 1?, ltw. One of theleading schools for young ladies in . i f-v 1L tr.Tl nni Vtr T A tit T (TtJ ' fill sketch of the'carer of thelate Professor rc t BUlllllt Grand mountain scenery in val- wo later a. visiter called at his office. Can I see the editor 7" ne inquirea rrrimv lift : ft "UeVU rOOSUDK on VX glMJ t a high stool. No, sir," repueu me youtu uu stool. "He's sick." ; . , T ... "What's the matter with him ? "TinnW." said the bbyv "One of ' . rt the pMcpicbl srg subscribers givejiim a bag of flour SSSS "to thf traffiTof agreat andabushel orpetother day, Tho txt i from the pen Ol a ana x reckon u. '.VlMKitJUe HgUt Sesan. An old woman living some distance from Mammoth Give, Ky., was sum money the other day to tell as an eye witness what she knew about a fight at several niffhts before in which neorJe were kuieu. ' one nishfid a market for iGOO, 000,000 of sil- ver, very much more in proportion to j iTwreaKhisr commerce than went i thwroeh our mints during the days of Tilitnitad coinage of silver. mA fall in the price of silver can easily be accounted for. In 1873 the world's product of silver at coinage Wine was $81.000,000 ; in 1892, it was if96.45D.000: in 1893,! $209,165,000, tW1 ii 1894. 1 1214.481.000. This enor- mrvna inrrpafirt in the production of sil ver took place despite the fact that sil had fallen in value 50 per cent - - By legislation passed anl871- ftor- irom . !y v. aft iADFiELD S FEMALE KEGU ittfo iriontbsi is petting D. ' Wii KECn 4T0B C0.4 ATIJffTX, i. i- tyf:tll Drno.-istakt fLOO uer IsstOe. ' its use. s Dranacen lor ci -Titecf months. A Timely Eeminder. Fflch season forces upon our consid oration its own peculiar perils to health. The advent of fall finds many reduced in strength and vigor, poorly prepared to ontine the business of hie., lhe stom- prehensively described and illustrated as ach and bowels, the great highway of .i t ..v .n;mni ornhnrnv. is especonomy, is free"DOSt-paid, on receit of three 2-cent The nervous system has also suffered in Ktamos bv Ueerge ll. lamws, wuciai Jine siruggicx ijv.- --- --- . 1 imee ui wui utvv , & , . i .i. i .:u ;,iT rolnf-1 ...ii Svromi BTid Germany suspend- mountea me etauu cuu. ,,.j .. - , c- . r. tance and many misgivings, and when ed the coinage of silver in 18 3-4 auesdoned by the court as to what she many demonetized silver and put tn-w about the, matter, said: ."Well, OOO.OOaof bullion upon ihe maretsof -- --- . . i I -m . TV I 11 I I A V, 1-1 m-ZZ TI Mi 1 31 - knowed about it was j isurope.- uenmarjt, , Austria and Hungary eacn suspeuueu Too Hach. Business. ble portrait. The September npimDer oi j cf Virginia, famed for, health. Ju Frank Leshe's Popular Monthly con- JrQpeail and American teachers, loll tains the ooenine installment of a new I course. Superior advantages in Musio ... ..rm . t . i. Cv-i. A ' K I n n A A . serial story, "ine aiaKuct ciaiuc, I Frances Swann Williams which bids I fair to prove the best work . ye oiiereo by this rising young Virginia l-'t. j and Art, Students from twenty oiaics. For cataloguC ftddress the President, ... ' . W. A. HARRIS. D. D.. 'Jun 27. ; i Roanoke, Virginia, Pailener Aeent. Grand Central station, New York. , ria.in . particular find in : the fall that combination of earth, air and water that mark this season as especially oan- Thefalhng lleaves, the decay - - t'(A'4 -1 nh?i. '-. s i ie fu?ir;J iuSii ia tf ' s!x.r n.td offi''J CSrea'jaitcoerta. : r..-i u-i w-rifrGc rpfih. : x uiiik, fi-oin to tM jirTdar. - m u iiideriice miuis S ett,&ll liM b if. i in iot-uiretiti, nooja, work, i:frr6. r.nT!liJiinp vAmnlnrA. KM, for f -jpl.ea BJiii-r- J ! Can be pnt up byany e-ne. i r.i fr ,: t o oruri 10 rvbairise. f I Kver w here We t, t"t- ? - n . nna who . haa hpn 1 orarona V a IIUll BUllJC ,nv 1 w - . , . - ' , lT..AJ'a uiTEnn4ri fl snn I innr vpcrpifl.nita IJUUluuvc - icurea uy i;T, TV r-:;,, ui-. v Rnmlk S medicine for what it has done for furnishes a" most valuable safeguard at great u . . v-,, time thPRA imnortant points, and should be mein auu i urinna in thvfAll before serious sickness VI W-t0 ' B J-!1 I Ml I i iiSi lyj. W V" tuww-I u-fw. au serious illness by keeping me. blood pure has laid you lew, .... . 1 111... nnnili. I - ' . i and all the oreans in a tiOUi Hood's vt ; ,. rrpnt Wood nnrifier. ' I Tmnure. Wood is the cause of boils, t ri"" " r l t - TT..4T. i, nnnnfa Uimri M nd other erupuons. xiouu o me jtavnii ." ViY1a KAnmo O A iiB l-rwv - IS. ... V cathartic with every one who tries them. SaraapanhV purifies the blood, and ilfrp. the fust 1 knowed a ' . , ..ll.J TP CmUka when Uiu jsanuers caneu j-wm umuu -liar n' Tom knocked him down with a ek of wood. One of Bill's friends then hit Tom with a knife, elicin' a Dig piece but of him. Sam Jones, who was a friend of Tom's, then shot the man with the knife en' three or four others got cut' right smart by somebody, xnat " t ' a. !ni4rra naturally caused some exciieinei!- jcu6v, en then they commepced figtin'' , . cure For Jleadaeiie. & b a. Tpm Rdv for all formsof Headache Electric Bitters has (proved to be the very best It eflecta a permanent cure A ii trifvst dreaded habitual sick iX . - v..i.T.oa lolrl to iits-innuence. e UCWinuivK j i t.o ri -orho are afflicted to procure "ifi . . ... Kftto and aive this remedy a lair iriau of habitual constipation Elec- Tiittera cures by ffiving the needed ttio T-io-a-elai and few cases long IAS.UO mi w . : rr t-Afiist the use of this medicine, lry once. Large bottles only Fifty cents P. B.Fetzer's Drug btore. the coinage cf demonetized silver. The Latin union composed of France, Be gium, Switzerland, Italy and ureece, was forced to suspend me comagw u ver because it was found impossiDie py free coinagel to sustain ithe value of sil ver buluon-f inis was laone uy uii- . . . 1 1 .;mn fwvm sion lor is monum ai viio v FEES SILVBB MAKES UlffCLK SAM A SLAVE. Give m TDog a Bad. Name, Etc. A boy in Kansas was puumg a uug along the road by a ropa The bpy call ed to his dog, Come along, Ppp, you ornery cuss. " A Dystanuer "" Why he called the dog Pop. "ForjBhort, ornnyprfld the DOV. - . ' : I .. "What's his full name?" "Populist,'? answered the boy. - ' Why call ni irop- i, nit r " REGULATOR . i i r srrrr s '- S' ' ,j I rltin'nl I " to 1876, when the suspension was made nlist?" asked the stranger. v.. Hw.itafrion aa .to me limo Ui continuance. Since then India, urazii, arnoTiMne. Tlfitmhlic and Chile have bus- .6x-v - : TTW TvondAt free comaae. ecreiarjf Kmitn at uamesvxiie, vxa., wj i "How is the sewing! society ftlono- wMth its work?" JMemoer: tif ully J One week we play lawn tennis, and the next weeK reau aiouu, play whist, "Wejl, sir, the bov said, "because he is just up. a rnlist. He's the orneryist dog in Kan . He ain't Wortn a qurn ray DiU his tail and! howL" Topeka Daily pitaL sas. on taMnff Snnaoxa Ltvxb Reg- cxatok, the "Kin a of Lrvpn Medi ceies?" That is what our readers want, and nothing but that It is the name old friend to which, the old folks pinned their faith and were never dis arnvrinted. But another good recom mendation for it is, that it is betteb than Prixs, never gripes, neverweak ens, but wprka m saoa an For Young Ladies. RoatiHfnl location: Mineral Springs. I TJnequ&led healthfnlness. Commodious, . well furnished buildings, wun oiu m places. Thorough mstrucHon by the very best teachers. Refined home life. Practical training xa uuiuuc Entire cost of boarding and tuition, in cluding Latin. 8.00 per month. Music and Art only $3.C0 per montn extra tor each. . .. . '. , For Catalogue. addrePfl .Uie .rrincipai, Eev. C: A. HAMILTON, an 8 4w . All llcahn,, N. C. Concord High School, Onens SeDt. 2- Prepares for in the Any College State. . getting "Beau- or easy and jitselfithat and one it lnVr.fr never Raw mv hinds as dirty as yours," said a' mother to herhttle girl. J , zt i. A'.A trftS thp "ro, but granumjtut u reply. - . My daughter is too Democratic in her 1 tural way, just like natarep j tr :ua Titra Hawirinj. j. wibu i ir rompn rmiCK ana sure. there Was 80me ;wa w .-.v w. - . Ifcsei ucn " t - -?frot 8And her to a iicooking I -p-aThrAv needs take a liver remedy, uuwv- - . V" i.- -- . . . I 1 Cirv. sflifl -Mis Barlow, "in ere is i -nd everyone inouia unto oi"jr nothin? more hauty in this world than i mons .Liver liegulator. , a cook." ii wai the 1 If you would be pare in minu u puiC m ttabii. i ? - TtA KnrA von tret it. - The Red Z ic An fh wranner. J Xx aieiuii w aj w - MT MT Co,, FbilrVleipwa. (S'aVES THOROUGH, PRACTICAL BUSINESS TRAINING. Foi;announcemet " formation, address, HOLLAND TUOMrsua , Concord, N.C 01 loilcck lavinidi-a U-iilfcl iai Cora. R i! i 0 0 n 0 tUICO tiivRV jvv. ! r ' f. M ii rrMntf-d. I A nose ma.2T.totrl per box.

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